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Featured researches published by Randi Vita.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

The Immune Epitope Database 2.0

Randi Vita; Laura Zarebski; Jason Greenbaum; Hussein Emami; Ilka Hoof; Nima Salimi; Rohini Damle; Alessandro Sette; Bjoern Peters

The Immune Epitope Database (IEDB, www.iedb.org) provides a catalog of experimentally characterized B and T cell epitopes, as well as data on Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) binding and MHC ligand elution experiments. The database represents the molecular structures recognized by adaptive immune receptors and the experimental contexts in which these molecules were determined to be immune epitopes. Epitopes recognized in humans, nonhuman primates, rodents, pigs, cats and all other tested species are included. Both positive and negative experimental results are captured. Over the course of 4 years, the data from 180 978 experiments were curated manually from the literature, which covers ∼99% of all publicly available information on peptide epitopes mapped in infectious agents (excluding HIV) and 93% of those mapped in allergens. In addition, data that would otherwise be unavailable to the public from 129 186 experiments were submitted directly by investigators. The curation of epitopes related to autoimmunity is expected to be completed by the end of 2010. The database can be queried by epitope structure, source organism, MHC restriction, assay type or host organism, among other criteria. The database structure, as well as its querying, browsing and reporting interfaces, was completely redesigned for the IEDB 2.0 release, which became publicly available in early 2009.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

The immune epitope database (IEDB) 3.0

Randi Vita; James A. Overton; Jason Greenbaum; Julia V. Ponomarenko; Jason D. Clark; Jason R. Cantrell; Daniel K. Wheeler; Joseph L. Gabbard; Deborah Hix; Alessandro Sette; Bjoern Peters

The IEDB, www.iedb.org, contains information on immune epitopes—the molecular targets of adaptive immune responses—curated from the published literature and submitted by National Institutes of Health funded epitope discovery efforts. From 2004 to 2012 the IEDB curation of journal articles published since 1960 has caught up to the present day, with >95% of relevant published literature manually curated amounting to more than 15 000 journal articles and more than 704 000 experiments to date. The revised curation target since 2012 has been to make recent research findings quickly available in the IEDB and thereby ensure that it continues to be an up-to-date resource. Having gathered a comprehensive dataset in the IEDB, a complete redesign of the query and reporting interface has been performed in the IEDB 3.0 release to improve how end users can access this information in an intuitive and biologically accurate manner. We here present this most recent release of the IEDB and describe the user testing procedures as well as the use of external ontologies that have enabled it.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Pre-existing immunity against swine-origin H1N1 influenza viruses in the general human population

Jason Greenbaum; Maya F. Kotturi; Yohan Kim; Carla Oseroff; Kerrie Vaughan; Nima Salimi; Randi Vita; Julia V. Ponomarenko; Richard H. Scheuermann; Alessandro Sette; Bjoern Peters

A major concern about the ongoing swine-origin H1N1 influenza virus (S-OIV) outbreak is that the virus may be so different from seasonal H1N1 that little immune protection exists in the human population. In this study, we examined the molecular basis for pre-existing immunity against S-OIV, namely the recognition of viral immune epitopes by T cells or B cells/antibodies that have been previously primed by circulating influenza strains. Using data from the Immune Epitope Database, we found that only 31% (8/26) of B-cell epitopes present in recently circulating H1N1 strains are conserved in the S-OIV, with only 17% (1/6) conserved in the hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) surface proteins. In contrast, 69% (54/78) of the epitopes recognized by CD8+ T cells are completely invariant. We further demonstrate experimentally that some memory T-cell immunity against S-OIV is present in the adult population and that such memory is of similar magnitude as the pre-existing memory against seasonal H1N1 influenza. Because protection from infection is antibody mediated, a new vaccine based on the specific S-OIV HA and NA proteins is likely to be required to prevent infection. However, T cells are known to blunt disease severity. Therefore, the conservation of a large fraction of T-cell epitopes suggests that the severity of an S-OIV infection, as far as it is determined by susceptibility of the virus to immune attack, would not differ much from that of seasonal flu. These results are consistent with reports about disease incidence, severity, and mortality rates associated with human S-OIV.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Clustering of T Cell Ligands on Artificial APC Membranes Influences T Cell Activation and Protein Kinase C θ Translocation to the T Cell Plasma Membrane

Francesca Giannoni; Joellen Barnett; Kun Bi; Rodrigo Samodal; Paola Lanza; Patrizia Marchese; Rosario Billetta; Randi Vita; Mark R. Klein; Berent Prakken; William W. Kwok; Eli E. Sercarz; Amnon Altman; Salvatore Albani

T cell activation is associated with active clustering of relevant molecules in membrane microdomains defined as the supramolecular activation cluster. The contact area between these regions on the surface of T cells and APC is defined as the immunological synapse. It has been recently shown that preclustering of MHC-peptide complexes in membrane microdomains on the APC surface affects the efficiency of immune synapse formation and the related T cell activation. Disruption of such clusters may reduce the efficiency of stimulation. We describe here an entirely artificial system for Ag-specific, ex vivo stimulation of human polyclonal T cells (artificial APC (aAPC)). aAPC are based on artificial membrane bilayers containing discrete membrane microdomains encompassing T cell ligands (i.e., appropriate MHC-peptide complexes in association with costimulatory molecules). We show here that preclustering of T cell ligands triggered a degree of T cell activation significantly higher than the one achieved when we used either soluble tetramers or aAPC in which MHC-peptide complexes were uniformly distributed within artificial bilayer membranes. This increased efficiency in stimulation was mirrored by increased translocation from the cytoplasm to the membrane of protein kinase θ, a T cell signaling molecule that colocalizes with the TCR within the supramolecular activation cluster, thus indicating efficient engagement of T cell activation pathways. Engineered aAPC may have immediate application for basic and clinical immunology studies pertaining to modulation of T cells ex vivo.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

SPAK kinase is a substrate and target of PKCθ in T-cell receptor-induced AP-1 activation pathway

Yingqiu Li; Junru Hu; Randi Vita; Binggang Sun; Hiroki Tabata; Amnon Altman

Protein kinase C‐θ (PKCθ) plays an important role in T‐cell activation via stimulation of AP‐1 and NF‐κB. Here we report the isolation of SPAK, a Ste20‐related upstream mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK), as a PKCθ‐interacting kinase. SPAK interacted with PKCθ (but not with PKCα) via its 99 COOH‐terminal residues. TCR/CD28 costimulation enhanced this association and stimulated the catalytic activity of SPAK. Recombinant SPAK was phosphorylated on Ser‐311 in its kinase domain by PKCθ, but not by PKCα. The magnitude and duration of TCR/CD28‐induced endogenous SPAK activation were markedly impaired in PKCθ‐deficient T cells. Transfected SPAK synergized with constitutively active PKCθ to activate AP‐1, but not NF‐κB. This synergistic activity, as well as the receptor‐induced SPAK activation, required the PKCθ‐interacting region of SPAK, and Ser‐311 mutation greatly reduced these activities of SPAK. Conversely, a SPAK‐specific RNAi or a dominant‐negative SPAK mutant inhibited PKCθ‐ and TCR/CD28‐induced AP‐1, but not NF‐κB, activation. These results define SPAK as a substrate and target of PKCθ in a TCR/CD28‐induced signaling pathway leading selectively to AP‐1 (but not NF‐κB) activation.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Ontology for Biomedical Investigations

Anita Bandrowski; Ryan R. Brinkman; Mathias Brochhausen; Matthew H. Brush; Bill Bug; Marcus C. Chibucos; Kevin Clancy; Mélanie Courtot; Dirk Derom; Michel Dumontier; Liju Fan; Jennifer Fostel; Gilberto Fragoso; Frank Gibson; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Melissa Haendel; Yongqun He; Mervi Heiskanen; Tina Hernandez-Boussard; Mark Jensen; Yu Lin; Allyson L. Lister; Phillip Lord; James P. Malone; Elisabetta Manduchi; Monnie McGee; Norman Morrison; James A. Overton; Helen Parkinson; Bjoern Peters

The Ontology for Biomedical Investigations (OBI) is an ontology that provides terms with precisely defined meanings to describe all aspects of how investigations in the biological and medical domains are conducted. OBI re-uses ontologies that provide a representation of biomedical knowledge from the Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) project and adds the ability to describe how this knowledge was derived. We here describe the state of OBI and several applications that are using it, such as adding semantic expressivity to existing databases, building data entry forms, and enabling interoperability between knowledge resources. OBI covers all phases of the investigation process, such as planning, execution and reporting. It represents information and material entities that participate in these processes, as well as roles and functions. Prior to OBI, it was not possible to use a single internally consistent resource that could be applied to multiple types of experiments for these applications. OBI has made this possible by creating terms for entities involved in biological and medical investigations and by importing parts of other biomedical ontologies such as GO, Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI) and Phenotype Attribute and Trait Ontology (PATO) without altering their meaning. OBI is being used in a wide range of projects covering genomics, multi-omics, immunology, and catalogs of services. OBI has also spawned other ontologies (Information Artifact Ontology) and methods for importing parts of ontologies (Minimum information to reference an external ontology term (MIREOT)). The OBI project is an open cross-disciplinary collaborative effort, encompassing multiple research communities from around the globe. To date, OBI has created 2366 classes and 40 relations along with textual and formal definitions. The OBI Consortium maintains a web resource (http://obi-ontology.org) providing details on the people, policies, and issues being addressed in association with OBI. The current release of OBI is available at http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/obi.owl.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

T Cell Responses to Known Allergen Proteins Are Differently Polarized and Account for a Variable Fraction of Total Response to Allergen Extracts

Carla Oseroff; John Sidney; Randi Vita; Victoria Tripple; Denise M. McKinney; Scott Southwood; Tess M. Brodie; Federica Sallusto; Howard M. Grey; Rafeul Alam; David H. Broide; Jason Greenbaum; Ravi Kolla; Bjoern Peters; Alessandro Sette

A panel of 133 allergens derived from 28 different sources, including fungi, trees, grasses, weeds, and indoor allergens, was surveyed utilizing prediction of HLA class II-binding peptides and ELISPOT assays with PBMC from allergic donors, resulting in the identification of 257 T cell epitopes. More than 90% of the epitopes were novel, and for 14 allergen sources were the first ever identified to our knowledge. The epitopes identified in the different allergen sources summed up to a variable fraction of the total extract response. In cases of allergens in which the identified T cell epitopes accounted for a minor fraction of the extract response, fewer known protein sequences were available, suggesting that for low epitope coverage allergen sources, additional allergen proteins remain to be identified. IL-5 and IFN-γ responses were measured as prototype Th2 and Th1 responses, respectively. Whereas in some cases (e.g., orchard grass, Alternaria, cypress, and Russian thistle) IL-5 production greatly exceeded IFN-γ, in others (e.g., Aspergillus, Penicillum, and alder) the production of IFN-γ exceeded IL-5. Thus, different allergen sources are associated with variable polarization of the responding T cells. The present study represents the most comprehensive survey to date of human allergen-derived T cell epitopes. These epitopes might be used to characterize T cell phenotype/T cell plasticity as a function of seasonality, or as a result of specific immunotherapy treatment or varying disease severity (asthma or rhinitis).


BMC Bioinformatics | 2006

Curation of complex, context-dependent immunological data

Randi Vita; Kerrie Vaughan; Laura Zarebski; Nima Salimi; Ward Fleri; Howard M. Grey; Muthu Sathiamurthy; John Mokili; Huynh-Hoa Bui; Philip E. Bourne; Julia V. Ponomarenko; Romulo de Castro; Russell K. Chan; John Sidney; Stephen S. Wilson; Scott Stewart; Scott Way; Björn Peters; Alessandro Sette

BackgroundThe Immune Epitope Database and Analysis Resource (IEDB) is dedicated to capturing, housing and analyzing complex immune epitope related data http://www.immuneepitope.org.DescriptionTo identify and extract relevant data from the scientific literature in an efficient and accurate manner, novel processes were developed for manual and semi-automated annotation.ConclusionFormalized curation strategies enable the processing of a large volume of context-dependent data, which are now available to the scientific community in an accessible and transparent format. The experiences described herein are applicable to other databases housing complex biological data and requiring a high level of curation expertise.


Cytometry Part A | 2008

The curation guidelines of the immune epitope database and analysis resource.

Randi Vita; Bjoern Peters; Alesandro Sette

The IEDB houses antibody and T cell epitope data and makes them accessible and searchable. The curation of literature references requires explicit guidelines in order to capture the data in an objective and consistent manner. Description of these guidelines ensures transparency of the database and facilitates direct submissions to the database.


Journal of Biomedical Semantics | 2016

An ontology for major histocompatibility restriction

Randi Vita; James A. Overton; Emily Seymour; John Sidney; Jim Kaufman; Rebecca L. Tallmadge; Shirley A. Ellis; John A. Hammond; Geoff W. Butcher; Alessandro Sette; Bjoern Peters

BackgroundMHC molecules are a highly diverse family of proteins that play a key role in cellular immune recognition. Over time, different techniques and terminologies have been developed to identify the specific type(s) of MHC molecule involved in a specific immune recognition context. No consistent nomenclature exists across different vertebrate species.PurposeTo correctly represent MHC related data in The Immune Epitope Database (IEDB), we built upon a previously established MHC ontology and created an ontology to represent MHC molecules as they relate to immunological experiments.DescriptionThis ontology models MHC protein chains from 16 species, deals with different approaches used to identify MHC, such as direct sequencing verses serotyping, relates engineered MHC molecules to naturally occurring ones, connects genetic loci, alleles, protein chains and multi-chain proteins, and establishes evidence codes for MHC restriction. Where available, this work is based on existing ontologies from the OBO foundry.ConclusionsOverall, representing MHC molecules provides a challenging and practically important test case for ontology building, and could serve as an example of how to integrate other ontology building efforts into web resources.

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Bjoern Peters

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Alessandro Sette

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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James A. Overton

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Jason Greenbaum

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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John Sidney

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Nima Salimi

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Carla Oseroff

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Kerrie Vaughan

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Laura Zarebski

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Ward Fleri

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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