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Dive into the research topics where Oliver J. Harrison is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver J. Harrison.


Nature | 2014

The alarmin IL-33 promotes regulatory T-cell function in the intestine

Chris Schiering; Thomas Krausgruber; Agnieszka Chomka; Anja Fröhlich; Krista Adelmann; Elizabeth A. Wohlfert; Johanna Pott; Thibault Griseri; Julia Bollrath; Ahmed N. Hegazy; Oliver J. Harrison; Benjamin M. J. Owens; Max Löhning; Yasmine Belkaid; Padraic G. Fallon; Fiona Powrie

FOXP3+ regulatory T cells (Treg cells) are abundant in the intestine, where they prevent dysregulated inflammatory responses to self and environmental stimuli. It is now appreciated that Treg cells acquire tissue-specific adaptations that facilitate their survival and function; however, key host factors controlling the Treg response in the intestine are poorly understood. The interleukin (IL)-1 family member IL-33 is constitutively expressed in epithelial cells at barrier sites, where it functions as an endogenous danger signal, or alarmin, in response to tissue damage. Recent studies in humans have described high levels of IL-33 in inflamed lesions of inflammatory bowel disease patients, suggesting a role for this cytokine in disease pathogenesis. In the intestine, both protective and pathological roles for IL-33 have been described in murine models of acute colitis, but its contribution to chronic inflammation remains ill defined. Here we show in mice that the IL-33 receptor ST2 is preferentially expressed on colonic Treg cells, where it promotes Treg function and adaptation to the inflammatory environment. IL-33 signalling in T cells stimulates Treg responses in several ways. First, it enhances transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1-mediated differentiation of Treg cells and, second, it provides a necessary signal for Treg-cell accumulation and maintenance in inflamed tissues. Strikingly, IL-23, a key pro-inflammatory cytokine in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease, restrained Treg responses through inhibition of IL-33 responsiveness. These results demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized link between an endogenous mediator of tissue damage and a major anti-inflammatory pathway, and suggest that the balance between IL-33 and IL-23 may be a key controller of intestinal immune responses.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

Innate lymphoid cells sustain colon cancer through production of interleukin-22 in a mouse model

Stefanie Kirchberger; Daniel J. Royston; Olivier Boulard; Emily E. Thornton; Fanny Franchini; Rose L. Szabady; Oliver J. Harrison; Fiona Powrie

Neutralization of IL-22 production from colonic innate lymphoid cells reduces dysplasia in bacterial-induced colon cancer by reducing proliferation of epithelial cells via reduced activation of Stat3.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

IL-1β mediates chronic intestinal inflammation by promoting the accumulation of IL-17A secreting innate lymphoid cells and CD4(+) Th17 cells.

Margherita Coccia; Oliver J. Harrison; Chris Schiering; Mark Asquith; Burkhard Becher; Fiona Powrie; Kevin J. Maloy

IL-1β promotes chronic intestinal inflammation through recruitment of granulocytes, activation of ILCs, accumulation of pathogenic T cells, and promotion of Th17 responses.


Nature | 2015

Commensal–dendritic-cell interaction specifies a unique protective skin immune signature

Shruti Naik; Nicolas Bouladoux; Jonathan L. Linehan; Seong-Ji Han; Oliver J. Harrison; Christoph Wilhelm; Sean Conlan; Sarah Himmelfarb; Allyson L. Byrd; Clayton Deming; Mariam Quiñones; Jason M. Brenchley; Heidi H. Kong; Roxanne Tussiwand; Kenneth M. Murphy; Miriam Merad; Julia A. Segre; Yasmine Belkaid

The skin represents the primary interface between the host and the environment. This organ is also home to trillions of microorganisms that play an important role in tissue homeostasis and local immunity. Skin microbial communities are highly diverse and can be remodelled over time or in response to environmental challenges. How, in the context of this complexity, individual commensal microorganisms may differentially modulate skin immunity and the consequences of these responses for tissue physiology remains unclear. Here we show that defined commensals dominantly affect skin immunity and identify the cellular mediators involved in this specification. In particular, colonization with Staphylococcus epidermidis induces IL-17A+ CD8+ T cells that home to the epidermis, enhance innate barrier immunity and limit pathogen invasion. Commensal-specific T-cell responses result from the coordinated action of skin-resident dendritic cell subsets and are not associated with inflammation, revealing that tissue-resident cells are poised to sense and respond to alterations in microbial communities. This interaction may represent an evolutionary means by which the skin immune system uses fluctuating commensal signals to calibrate barrier immunity and provide heterologous protection against invasive pathogens. These findings reveal that the skin immune landscape is a highly dynamic environment that can be rapidly and specifically remodelled by encounters with defined commensals, findings that have profound implications for our understanding of tissue-specific immunity and pathologies.


Cell | 2015

Microbiota-Dependent Sequelae of Acute Infection Compromise Tissue-Specific Immunity

Denise Morais da Fonseca; Timothy W. Hand; Seong-Ji Han; Michael Y. Gerner; Arielle Glatman Zaretsky; Allyson L. Byrd; Oliver J. Harrison; Alexandra M. Ortiz; Mariam Quiñones; Giorgio Trinchieri; Jason M. Brenchley; Igor E. Brodsky; Ronald N. Germain; Gwendalyn J. Randolph; Yasmine Belkaid

Infections have been proposed as initiating factors for inflammatory disorders; however, identifying associations between defined infectious agents and the initiation of chronic disease has remained elusive. Here, we report that a single acute infection can have dramatic and long-term consequences for tissue-specific immunity. Following clearance of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, sustained inflammation and associated lymphatic leakage in the mesenteric adipose tissue deviates migratory dendritic cells to the adipose compartment, thereby preventing their accumulation in the mesenteric lymph node. As a consequence, canonical mucosal immune functions, including tolerance and protective immunity, are persistently compromised. Post-resolution of infection, signals derived from the microbiota maintain inflammatory mesentery remodeling and consequently, transient ablation of the microbiota restores mucosal immunity. Our results indicate that persistent disruption of communication between tissues and the immune system following clearance of an acute infection represents an inflection point beyond which tissue homeostasis and immunity is compromised for the long-term. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Immunity | 2017

Homeostatic Immunity and the Microbiota

Yasmine Belkaid; Oliver J. Harrison

The microbiota plays a fundamental role in the induction, education, and function of the host immune system. In return, the host immune system has evolved multiple means by which to maintain its symbiotic relationship with the microbiota. The maintenance of this dialogue allows the induction of protective responses to pathogens and the utilization of regulatory pathways involved in the sustained tolerance to innocuous antigens. The ability of microbes to set the immunological tone of tissues, both locally and systemically, requires tonic sensing of microbes and complex feedback loops between innate and adaptive components of the immune system. Here we review the dominant cellular mediators of these interactions and discuss emerging themes associated with our current understanding of the homeostatic immunological dialogue between the host and its microbiota.


Mucosal Immunology | 2015

Epithelial-derived IL-18 regulates Th17 cell differentiation and Foxp3+ Treg cell function in the intestine

Oliver J. Harrison; Naren Srinivasan; Johanna Pott; Chris Schiering; Thomas Krausgruber; Nicholas E. Ilott; Kevin J. Maloy

Elevated levels of interleukin-18 (IL-18) are found in many chronic inflammatory disorders, including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and polymorphisms in the IL18R1–IL18RAP locus are associated with IBD susceptibility. IL-18 is an IL-1 family cytokine that has been proposed to promote barrier function in the intestine, but the effects of IL-18 on intestinal CD4+ T cells are poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that IL-18R1 expression is enhanced on both effector and regulatory CD4+ T cells in the intestinal lamina propria, with T helper type 17 (Th17) cells exhibiting particularly high levels. We further show that, during steady state, intestinal epithelial cells constitutively secrete IL-18 that acts directly on IL-18R1-expressing CD4+ T cells to limit colonic Th17 cell differentiation, in part by antagonizing IL-1R1 signaling. In addition, although IL-18R1 is not required for colonic Foxp3+ regulatory T (Treg) cell differentiation, we found that IL-18R1 signaling was critical for Foxp3+ Treg cell–mediated control of intestinal inflammation, where it promoted the expression of key Treg effector molecules. Thus IL-18 is a key epithelial-derived cytokine that differentially regulates distinct subsets of intestinal CD4+ T cells during both homeostatic and inflammatory conditions, a finding with potential implications for treatment of chronic inflammatory disorders.


eLife | 2016

The autophagy gene Atg16l1 differentially regulates Treg and TH2 cells to control intestinal inflammation

Agnieszka Martyna Kabat; Oliver J. Harrison; Thomas Riffelmacher; Amin E. Moghaddam; Claire Pearson; Adam Laing; Lucie Abeler-Dörner; Simon P. Forman; Richard K. Grencis; Quentin J. Sattentau; Anna Katharina Simon; Johanna Pott; Kevin J. Maloy

A polymorphism in the autophagy gene Atg16l1 is associated with susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); however, it remains unclear how autophagy contributes to intestinal immune homeostasis. Here, we demonstrate that autophagy is essential for maintenance of balanced CD4+ T cell responses in the intestine. Selective deletion of Atg16l1 in T cells in mice resulted in spontaneous intestinal inflammation that was characterized by aberrant type 2 responses to dietary and microbiota antigens, and by a loss of Foxp3+ Treg cells. Specific ablation of Atg16l1 in Foxp3+ Treg cells in mice demonstrated that autophagy directly promotes their survival and metabolic adaptation in the intestine. Moreover, we also identify an unexpected role for autophagy in directly limiting mucosal TH2 cell expansion. These findings provide new insights into the reciprocal control of distinct intestinal TH cell responses by autophagy, with important implications for understanding and treatment of chronic inflammatory disorders. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.12444.001


Journal of Innate Immunity | 2011

Innate immune activation in intestinal homeostasis.

Oliver J. Harrison; Kevin J. Maloy

Loss of intestinal immune regulation leading to aberrant immune responses to the commensal microbiota are believed to precipitate the chronic inflammation observed in the gastrointestinal tract of patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Innate immune receptors that recognize conserved components derived from the microbiota are widely expressed by both epithelial cells and leucocytes of the gastrointestinal tract and play a key role in host protection from infectious pathogens; yet precisely how pathogenic and commensal microbes are distinguished is not understood. Furthermore, aberrant innate immune activation may also drive intestinal pathology, as patients with IBD exhibit extensive infiltration of innate immune cells to the inflamed intestine, and polymorphisms in many innate immunity genes influence susceptibility to IBD. Thus, a balanced interaction between the microbiota and innate immune activation is required to maintain a healthy mutualistic relationship between the microbiota and the host, which when disturbed can result in intestinal inflammation.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology | 2013

Regulatory T Cells and Immune Tolerance in the Intestine

Oliver J. Harrison; Fiona Powrie

A fundamental role of the mammalian immune system is to eradicate pathogens while minimizing immunopathology. Instigating and maintaining immunological tolerance within the intestine represents a unique challenge to the mucosal immune system. Regulatory T cells are critical for continued immune tolerance in the intestine through active control of innate and adaptive immune responses. Dynamic adaptation of regulatory T-cell populations to the intestinal tissue microenvironment is key in this process. Here, we discuss specialization of regulatory T-cell responses in the intestine, and how a breakdown in these processes can lead to chronic intestinal inflammation.

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Yasmine Belkaid

National Institutes of Health

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Jason M. Brenchley

National Institutes of Health

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Nicolas Bouladoux

National Institutes of Health

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Seong-Ji Han

University of California

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Johanna Pott

Hannover Medical School

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