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Dive into the research topics where Nuray Aslan is active.

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Featured researches published by Nuray Aslan.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

CD8 T Cell Cross-Reactivity Networks Mediate Heterologous Immunity in Human EBV and Murine Vaccinia Virus Infections

Markus Cornberg; Shalyn Catherine Clute; Levi B. Watkin; Frances M. Saccoccio; Sung-Kwon Kim; Yuri N. Naumov; Michael A. Brehm; Nuray Aslan; Raymond M. Welsh; Liisa K. Selin

In this study, we demonstrate complex networks of CD8 T cell cross-reactivities between influenza A virus and EBV in humans and between lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus and vaccinia virus in mice. We also show directly that cross-reactive T cells mediate protective heterologous immunity in mice. Subsets of T cell populations reactive with one epitope cross-reacted with either of several other epitopes encoded by the same or the heterologous virus. Human T cells specific to EBV-encoded BMLF1280–288 could be cross-reactive with two influenza A virus or two other EBV epitopes. Mouse T cells specific to the vaccinia virus-encoded a11r198–205 could be cross-reactive with three different lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, one Pichinde virus, or one other vaccinia virus epitope. Patterns of cross-reactivity differed among individuals, reflecting the private specificities of the host’s immune repertoire and divergence in the abilities of T cell populations to mediate protective immunity. Defining such cross-reactive networks between commonly encountered human pathogens may facilitate the design of vaccines.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Broad Cross-Reactive TCR Repertoires Recognizing Dissimilar Epstein-Barr and Influenza A Virus Epitopes

Shalyn Catherine Clute; Yuri N. Naumov; Levi B. Watkin; Nuray Aslan; John L. Sullivan; David A. Thorley-Lawson; Katherine Luzuriaga; Raymond M. Welsh; Roberto Puzone; Franco Celada; Liisa K. Selin

Memory T cells cross-reactive with epitopes encoded by related or even unrelated viruses may alter the immune response and pathogenesis of infection by a process known as heterologous immunity. Because a challenge virus epitope may react with only a subset of the T cell repertoire in a cross-reactive epitope-specific memory pool, the vigorous cross-reactive response may be narrowly focused, or oligoclonal. We show in this article, by examining human T cell cross-reactivity between the HLA-A2–restricted influenza A virus-encoded M158–66 epitope (GILGFVFTL) and the dissimilar Epstein-Barr virus-encoded BMLF1280–288 epitope (GLCTLVAML), that, under some conditions, heterologous immunity can lead to a significant broadening, rather than a narrowing, of the TCR repertoire. We suggest that dissimilar cross-reactive epitopes might generate a broad, rather than a narrow, T cell repertoire if there is a lack of dominant high-affinity clones; this hypothesis is supported by computer simulation.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015

Vaccination and heterologous immunity: educating the immune system

Anna Gil; Laurie L. Kenney; Rabinarayan Mishra; Levi B. Watkin; Nuray Aslan; Liisa K. Selin

This review discusses three inter-related topics: (1) the immaturity of the neonatal and infant immune response; (2) heterologous immunity, where prior infection history with unrelated pathogens alters disease outcome resulting in either enhanced protective immunity or increased immunopathology to new infections, and (3) epidemiological human vaccine studies that demonstrate vaccines can have beneficial or detrimental effects on subsequent unrelated infections. The results from the epidemiological and heterologous immunity studies suggest that the immune system has tremendous plasticity and that each new infection or vaccine that an individual is exposed to during a lifetime will potentially alter the dynamics of their immune system. It also suggests that each new infection or vaccine that an infant receives is not only perturbing the immune system but is educating the immune system and laying down the foundation for all subsequent responses. This leads to the question, is there an optimum way to educate the immune system? Should this be taken into consideration in our vaccination protocols?


Mbio | 2017

Severity of acute infectious mononucleosis correlates with cross-reactive influenza CD8 T-cell receptor repertoires

Nuray Aslan; Levi B. Watkin; Anna Gil; Rabinarayan Mishra; Fransenio G. Clark; Raymond M. Welsh; Dario Ghersi; Katherine Luzuriaga; Liisa K. Selin

ABSTRACT Fifty years after the discovery of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), it remains unclear how primary infection with this virus leads to massive CD8 T-cell expansion and acute infectious mononucleosis (AIM) in young adults. AIM can vary greatly in severity, from a mild transient influenza-like illness to a prolonged severe syndrome. We questioned whether expansion of a unique HLA-A2.01-restricted, cross-reactive CD8 T-cell response between influenza virus A-M158 (IAV-M1) and EBV BMLF1280 (EBV-BM) could modulate the immune response to EBV and play a role in determining the severity of AIM in 32 college students. Only ex vivo total IAV-M1 and IAV-M1+EBV-BM cross-reactive tetramer+ frequencies directly correlated with AIM severity and were predictive of severe disease. Expansion of specific cross-reactive memory IAV-M1 T-cell receptor (TCR) Vβ repertoires correlated with levels of disease severity. There were unique profiles of qualitatively different functional responses in the cross-reactive and EBV-specific CD8 T-cell responses in each of the three groups studied, severe-AIM patients, mild-AIM patients, and seropositive persistently EBV-infected healthy donors, that may result from differences in TCR repertoire use. IAV-M1 tetramer+ cells were functionally cross-reactive in short-term cultures, were associated with the highest disease severity in AIM, and displayed enhanced production of gamma interferon, a cytokine that greatly amplifies immune responses, thus frequently contributing to induction of immunopathology. Altogether, these data link heterologous immunity via CD8 T-cell cross-reactivity to CD8 T-cell repertoire selection, function, and resultant disease severity in a common and important human infection. In particular, it highlights for the first time a direct link between the TCR repertoire with pathogenesis and the diversity of outcomes upon pathogen encounter. IMPORTANCE The pathogenic impact of immune responses that by chance cross-react to unrelated viruses has not been established in human infections. Here, we demonstrate that the severity of acute infectious mononucleosis (AIM), an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-induced disease prevalent in young adults but not children, is associated with increased frequencies of T cells cross-reactive to EBV and the commonly acquired influenza A virus (IAV). The T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire and functions of these cross-reactive T cells differed between mild- and severe-AIM patients, most likely because these two groups of patients had selected different memory TCR repertoires in response to IAV infections encountered earlier. This heterologous immunity may explain variability in disease outcome and why young adults with more-developed IAV-specific memory T-cell pools have more-severe disease than children, who have less-developed memory pools. This study provides a new framework for understanding the role of heterologous immunity in human health and disease and highlights an important developing field examining the role of T-cell repertoires in the mediation of immunopathology. The pathogenic impact of immune responses that by chance cross-react to unrelated viruses has not been established in human infections. Here, we demonstrate that the severity of acute infectious mononucleosis (AIM), an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-induced disease prevalent in young adults but not children, is associated with increased frequencies of T cells cross-reactive to EBV and the commonly acquired influenza A virus (IAV). The T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire and functions of these cross-reactive T cells differed between mild- and severe-AIM patients, most likely because these two groups of patients had selected different memory TCR repertoires in response to IAV infections encountered earlier. This heterologous immunity may explain variability in disease outcome and why young adults with more-developed IAV-specific memory T-cell pools have more-severe disease than children, who have less-developed memory pools. This study provides a new framework for understanding the role of heterologous immunity in human health and disease and highlights an important developing field examining the role of T-cell repertoires in the mediation of immunopathology.


bioRxiv | 2018

High diversity, turnover, and structural constraints characterize TCR α and β repertoire selection

Larisa Kamga; Anna Gil; Inyoung Song; Ramakanth Chirravuri; Nuray Aslan; Dario Ghersi; Lawrence J. Stern; Liisa K. Selin; Katherine Luzuriaga

Recognition modes of individual T-cell receptors (TCR) are well studied, but how TCR repertoires are selected during acute through persistent human virus infections is less clear. Here, we show that persistent EBV-specific clonotypes account for only 9% of unique clonotypes but are highly expanded in acute infectious mononucleosis, and have distinct antigen-specific public features that drive selection into convalescence. The other 91% of highly diverse unique clonotypes disappear and are replaced in convalescence by equally diverse “de-novo” clonotypes. These broad fluctuating repertoires lend plasticity to antigen recognition and potentially protect against T-cell clonal loss and viral escape.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

Unique influenza A cross-reactive memory CD8 T-cell receptor repertoire has a potential to protect against EBV seroconversion

Levi B. Watkin; Rabinarayan Mishra; Anna Gil; Nuray Aslan; Dario Ghersi; Katherine Luzuriaga; Liisa K. Selin


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Influenza-A virus specific Epstein-Barr virus lytic memory CD8 T cells in EBV sero-negative middle age adults (VIR5P.1147)

Rabinarayan Mishra; Levi B. Watkin; Nuray Aslan; Anna Gil; Katherine Luzuriaga; Liisa K. Selin


Archive | 2014

Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV)-lytic Cross-reactive Influenza-A (IAV) Memory CD8 T-cells in EBV Sero-negative Middle-aged Adults

Rabinarayan Mishra; Levi B. Watkin; Nuray Aslan; Anna Gil; Katherine Luzuriaga; Liisa K. Selin


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Severity of infectious mononucleosis (IM) correlates with the frequency of crossreactive influenza A virus (IAV)-M1 and Epstein Barr virus (EBV)-BMLF-1-specific CD8 T cells (HUM8P.345)

Liisa K. Selin; Nuray Aslan; Levi B. Watkin; Anna Gil; Katherine Luzuriaga


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Acute symptomatic influenza A virus (IAV) infection in humans leads to expansion of highly diverse CD8 T cell repertoires crossreactive with persistent Epstein Barr virus (EBV) (HUM8P.344)

Anna Gil; Rabinarayan Mishra; Nuray Aslan; Liisa K. Selin

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Liisa K. Selin

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Katherine Luzuriaga

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Levi B. Watkin

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Anna Gil

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Rabinarayan Mishra

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Dario Ghersi

University of Nebraska Omaha

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Raymond M. Welsh

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Shalyn Catherine Clute

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Yuri N. Naumov

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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