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Dive into the research topics where Rashmi Jalah is active.

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Featured researches published by Rashmi Jalah.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Intracellular Interaction of Interleukin-15 with Its Receptor α during Production Leads to Mutual Stabilization and Increased Bioactivity

Cristina Bergamaschi; Margherita Rosati; Rashmi Jalah; Antonio Valentin; Viraj Kulkarni; Candido Alicea; Gen-Mu Zhang; Vainav Patel; Barbara K. Felber; George N. Pavlakis

We show that co-expression of interleukin 15 (IL-15) and IL-15 receptor α (IL-15Rα) in the same cell allows for the intracellular interaction of the two proteins early after translation, resulting in increased stability and secretion of both molecules as a complex. In the absence of co-expressed IL-15Rα, a large portion of the produced IL-15 is rapidly degraded immediately after synthesis. Co-injection into mice of IL-15 and IL-15Rα expression plasmids led to significantly increased levels of the cytokine in serum as well as increased biological activity of IL-15. Examination of natural killer cells and T lymphocytes in mouse organs showed a great expansion of both cell types in the lung, liver, and spleen. The presence of IL-15Rα also increased the number of CD44high memory cells with effector phenotype (CD44highCD62L-). Thus, mutual stabilization of IL-15 and IL-15Rα leads to remarkable increases in production, stability, and tissue availability of bioactive IL-15 in vivo. The in vivo data show that the most potent form of IL-15 is as part of a complex with its receptor α either on the surface of the producing cells or as a soluble extracellular complex. These results explain the reason for coordinate expression of IL-15 and IL-15Rα in the same cell and suggest that the IL-15Rα is part of the active IL-15 cytokine rather than part of the receptor.


Vaccine | 2008

Increased immune responses in rhesus macaques by DNA vaccination combined with electroporation

Margherita Rosati; Antonio Valentin; Rashmi Jalah; Vainav Patel; Agneta von Gegerfelt; Cristina Bergamaschi; Candido Alicea; Deborah Weiss; Jim Treece; Ranajit Pal; Phillip D. Markham; Ernesto T. A. Marques; J. Thomas August; Amir R. Khan; Ruxandra Draghia-Akli; Barbara K. Felber; George N. Pavlakis

We used optimized DNA expression vectors to compare two gene delivery methodologies in rhesus macaques, namely direct DNA injection and in vivo adaptive constant-current electroporation via the intramuscular route. The use of in vivo electroporation increased levels of gene expression and immune responses. We used an optimized HIV gag expression plasmid to show the development of new cellular immune responses in SIV-infected animals controlling viremia. Furthermore, after vaccination with SIV expression plasmids the recall responses to the SIV antigens were very high, indicating that DNA is a strong boost in the presence of antiretroviral treatment in SIV-infected animals. There was substantial animal-to-animal variability in DNA expression, revealed by plasma measurements of IL-15 produced by co-injected IL-15 DNA. IL-15 expression levels correlated with peak immune responses. Electroporation led to an expansion of antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of both central and effector memory phenotype. These results indicate that improved gene delivery and expression by electroporation dramatically increases immunogenicity of DNA vaccines. Electroporation is thus an important method to improve the effectiveness of DNA vaccination.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

Immunologic and Therapeutic Synergy of IL-27 and IL-2: Enhancement of T Cell Sensitization, Tumor-Specific CTL Reactivity and Complete Regression of Disseminated Neuroblastoma Metastases in the Liver and Bone Marrow

Rosalba Salcedo; Julie A. Hixon; Jimmy K. Stauffer; Rashmi Jalah; Alan D. Brooks; Tahira Khan; Ren-Ming Dai; Loretta Scheetz; Erin Lincoln; Timothy C. Back; Douglas Powell; Arthur A. Hurwitz; Thomas J. Sayers; Robert A. Kastelein; George N. Pavlakis; Barbara K. Felber; Giorgio Trinchieri; Jon M. Wigginton

IL-27 exerts antitumor activity in murine orthotopic neuroblastoma, but only partial antitumor effect in disseminated disease. This study demonstrates that combined treatment with IL-2 and IL-27 induces potent antitumor activity in disseminated neuroblastoma metastasis. Complete durable tumor regression was achieved in 90% of mice bearing metastatic TBJ-IL-27 tumors treated with IL-2 compared with only 40% of mice bearing TBJ-IL-27 tumors alone and 0% of mice bearing TBJ-FLAG tumors with or without IL-2 treatment. Comparable antitumor effects were achieved by IL-27 protein produced upon hydrodynamic IL-27 plasmid DNA delivery when combined with IL-2. Although delivery of IL-27 alone, or in combination with IL-2, mediated pronounced regression of neuroblastoma metastases in the liver, combined delivery of IL-27 and IL-2 was far more effective than IL-27 alone against bone marrow metastases. Combined exposure to IL-27 produced by tumor and IL-2 synergistically enhances the generation of tumor-specific CTL reactivity. Potentiation of CTL reactivity by IL-27 occurs via mechanisms that appear to be engaged during both the initial sensitization and effector phase. Potent immunologic memory responses are generated in mice cured of their disseminated disease by combined delivery of IL-27 and IL-2, and depletion of CD8+ ablates the antitumor efficacy of this combination. Moreover, IL-27 delivery can inhibit the expansion of CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory and IL-17-expressing CD4+ cells that are otherwise observed among tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes from mice treated with IL-2. These studies demonstrate that IL-27 and IL-2 synergistically induce complete tumor regression and long-term survival in mice bearing widely metastatic neuroblastoma tumors.


Vaccine | 2010

Long-lasting humoral and cellular immune responses and mucosal dissemination after intramuscular DNA immunization.

Vainav Patel; Antonio Valentin; Viraj Kulkarni; Margherita Rosati; Cristina Bergamaschi; Rashmi Jalah; Candido Alicea; Jacob T. Minang; Matthew T. Trivett; Claes Ohlen; Jun Zhao; Marjorie Robert-Guroff; Amir S. Khan; Ruxandra Draghia-Akli; Barbara K. Felber; George N. Pavlakis

Naïve Indian rhesus macaques were immunized with a mixture of optimized plasmid DNAs expressing several SIV antigens using in vivo electroporation via the intramuscular route. The animals were monitored for the development of SIV-specific systemic (blood) and mucosal (bronchoalveolar lavage) cellular and humoral immune responses. The immune responses were of great magnitude, broad (Gag, Pol, Nef, Tat and Vif), long-lasting (up to 90 weeks post third vaccination) and were boosted with each subsequent immunization, even after an extended 90-week rest period. The SIV-specific cellular immune responses were consistently more abundant in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) than in blood, and were characterized as predominantly effector memory CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells in BAL and as both central and effector memory T cells in blood. SIV-specific T cells containing Granzyme B were readily detected in both blood and BAL, suggesting the presence of effector cells with cytolytic potential. DNA vaccination also elicited long-lasting systemic and mucosal humoral immune responses, including the induction of Gag-specific IgA. The combination of optimized DNA vectors and improved intramuscular delivery by in vivo electroporation has the potential to elicit both cellular and humoral responses and dissemination to the periphery, and thus to improve DNA immunization efficacy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

The p40 Subunit of Interleukin (IL)-12 Promotes Stabilization and Export of the p35 Subunit IMPLICATIONS FOR IMPROVED IL-12 CYTOKINE PRODUCTION

Rashmi Jalah; Margherita Rosati; Brunda Ganneru; Guy R. Pilkington; Antonio Valentin; Viraj Kulkarni; Cristina Bergamaschi; Bhabadeb Chowdhury; Gen-Mu Zhang; Rachel Kelly Beach; Candido Alicea; Kate E. Broderick; Niranjan Y. Sardesai; George N. Pavlakis; Barbara K. Felber

Background: The biosynthesis of IL-12p70 depends on the intracellular interaction of its p35 and p40 subunits. Results: The p40 subunit stabilizes p35 and promotes its secretion. Conclusion: Understanding the regulatory steps of IL-12 biosynthesis led to the generation of optimized IL-12 plasmids. Significance: Availability of expression-optimized IL-12 DNA plasmids is important for practical applications as DNA vaccine adjuvants and in cancer immunotherapy. IL-12 is a 70-kDa heterodimeric cytokine composed of the p35 and p40 subunits. To maximize cytokine production from plasmid DNA, molecular steps controlling IL-12p70 biosynthesis at the posttranscriptional and posttranslational levels were investigated. We show that the combination of RNA/codon-optimized gene sequences and fine-tuning of the relative expression levels of the two subunits within a cell resulted in increased production of the IL-12p70 heterodimer. We found that the p40 subunit plays a critical role in enhancing the stability, intracellular trafficking, and export of the p35 subunit. This posttranslational regulation mediated by the p40 subunit is conserved in mammals. Based on these findings, dual gene expression vectors were generated, producing an optimal ratio of the two subunits, resulting in a ∼1 log increase in human, rhesus, and murine IL-12p70 production compared with vectors expressing the wild type sequences. Such optimized DNA plasmids also produced significantly higher levels of systemic bioactive IL-12 upon in vivo DNA delivery in mice compared with plasmids expressing the wild type sequences. A single therapeutic injection of an optimized murine IL-12 DNA plasmid showed significantly more potent control of tumor development in the B16 melanoma cancer model in mice. Therefore, the improved IL-12p70 DNA vectors have promising potential for in vivo use as molecular vaccine adjuvants and in cancer immunotherapy.


Vaccine | 2011

Comparison of immune responses generated by optimized DNA vaccination against SIV antigens in mice and macaques

Viraj Kulkarni; Rashmi Jalah; Brunda Ganneru; Cristina Bergamaschi; Candido Alicea; Agneta von Gegerfelt; Vainav Patel; Gen-Mu Zhang; Bhabadeb Chowdhury; Kate E. Broderick; Niranjan Y. Sardesai; Antonio Valentin; Margherita Rosati; Barbara K. Felber; George N. Pavlakis

Optimized DNA vectors were constructed comprising the proteome of SIV including the structural, enzymatic, regulatory, and accessory proteins. In addition to native antigens as produced by the virus, fusion proteins and modified antigens with altered secretion, cellular localization and stability characteristics were generated. The DNA vectors were tested for expression upon transfection in human cells. In addition, the vectors were tested either alone or in combinations in mice and macaques, which provided an opportunity to compare immune responses in two animal models. DNA only immunization using intramuscular injection in the absence or presence of in vivo electroporation did not alter the phenotype of the induced T cell responses in mice. Although several fusion proteins induced immune responses to all the components of a polyprotein, we noted fusion proteins that abrogated immune response to some of the components. Since the expression levels of such fusion proteins were not affected, these data suggest that the immune recognition of certain components was altered by the fusion. Testing different DNA vectors in mice and macaques revealed that a combination of DNAs producing different forms of the same antigen generated more balanced immune responses, a desirable feature for an optimal AIDS vaccine.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

Secretion and Biological Activity of Short Signal Peptide IL-15 Is Chaperoned by IL-15 Receptor Alpha In Vivo

Cristina Bergamaschi; Rashmi Jalah; Viraj Kulkarni; Margherita Rosati; Gen-Mu Zhang; Candido Alicea; Andrei S. Zolotukhin; Barbara K. Felber; George N. Pavlakis

The two known isoforms of IL-15 contain either a long signal peptide (LSP) or a short signal peptide (SSP), and are produced by alternatively spliced transcripts. It has been proposed that SSP IL-15 remains exclusively intracellular, and its function is unclear. In this study, we show that, similar to LSP IL-15, the SSP IL-15 is stabilized and secreted efficiently upon coexpression of IL-15Rα. Coinjection of SSP IL-15- and IL-15Rα-expressing plasmids into mice resulted in increased plasma levels of bioactive heterodimeric IL-15 and mobilization and expansion of NK and T cells. Therefore, SSP IL-15 is secreted and bioactive when produced as a heterodimer with IL-15Rα in the same cell. The apparent t1/2 of this heterodimer is lower compared with LSP IL-15/IL-15Rα, due to different intracellular processing. Coexpression of both LSP IL-15 and SSP IL-15 in the presence of IL-15Rα results in lower levels of bioactive IL-15, indicating that LSP and SSP IL-15 compete for the binding to IL-15Rα when expressed in the same cell. Because the SSP IL-15 interaction to IL-15Rα leads to a complex with lower apparent stability, SSP IL-15 functions as competitive inhibitor of LSP IL-15. The data suggest that usage of alternative splicing is an additional level of control of IL-15 activity. Expression of both SSP and LSP forms of IL-15 appears to be conserved in many mammals, suggesting that SSP may be important for expressing a form of IL-15 with lower magnitude or duration of biological effects.


Vaccine | 2010

Repeated DNA therapeutic vaccination of chronically SIV-infected macaques provides additional virological benefit.

Antonio Valentin; Agneta von Gegerfelt; Margherita Rosati; Georgios Miteloudis; Candido Alicea; Cristina Bergamaschi; Rashmi Jalah; Vainav Patel; Amir S. Khan; Ruxandra Draghia-Akli; George N. Pavlakis; Barbara K. Felber

We have previously reported that therapeutic immunization by intramuscular injection of optimized plasmid DNAs encoding SIV antigens effectively induces immune responses able to reduce viremia in antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated SIVmac251-infected Indian rhesus macaques. We subjected such therapeutically immunized macaques to a second round of therapeutic vaccination using a combination of plasmids expressing SIV genes and the IL-15/IL-15 receptor alpha as molecular adjuvant, which were delivered by the more efficacious in vivo constant-current electroporation. A very strong induction of antigen-specific responses to Gag, Env, Nef, and Pol, during ART (1.2-1.6% of SIV-specific T cells in the circulating T lymphocytes) was obtained with the improved vaccination method. Immunological responses were characterized by the production of IFN-gamma, IL-2, and TNF-alpha either alone, or in combination as double or triple cytokine positive multifunctional T cells. A significant induction of CD4(+) T cell responses, mainly targeting Gag, Nef, and Pol, as well as of CD8(+) T cells, mainly targeting Env, was found in both T cells with central memory and effector memory markers. After release from ART, the animals showed a virological benefit with a further approximately 1 log reduction in viremia. Vaccination with plasmid DNAs has several advantages over other vaccine modalities, including the possibility for repeated administration, and was shown to induce potent, efficacious, and long-lasting recall immune responses. Therefore, these data support the concept of adding DNA vaccination to the HAART regimen to boost the HIV-specific immune responses.


Vaccine | 2014

Adjuvants for vaccines to drugs of abuse and addiction.

Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas; Oscar B. Torres; Rashmi Jalah; Zoltan Beck

Immunotherapeutic vaccines to drugs of abuse, including nicotine, cocaine, heroin, oxycodone, methamphetamine, and others are being developed. The theoretical basis of such vaccines is to induce antibodies that sequester the drug in the blood in the form of antibody-bound drug that cannot cross the blood brain barrier, thereby preventing psychoactive effects. Because the drugs are haptens a successful vaccine relies on development of appropriate hapten-protein carrier conjugates. However, because induction of high and prolonged levels of antibodies is required for an effective vaccine, and because injection of T-independent haptenic drugs of abuse does not induce memory recall responses, the role of adjuvants during immunization plays a critical role. As reviewed herein, preclinical studies often use strong adjuvants such as complete and incomplete Freunds adjuvant and others that cannot be, or in the case of many newer adjuvants, have never been, employed in humans. Balanced against this, the only adjuvant that has been included in candidate vaccines in human clinical trials to nicotine and cocaine has been aluminum hydroxide gel. While aluminum salts have been widely utilized worldwide in numerous licensed vaccines, the experience with human responses to aluminum salt-adjuvanted vaccines to haptenic drugs of abuse has suggested that the immune responses are too weak to allow development of a successful vaccine. What is needed is an adjuvant or combination of adjuvants that are safe, potent, widely available, easily manufactured, and cost-effective. Based on our review of the field we recommend the following adjuvant combinations either for research or for product development for human use: aluminum salt with adsorbed monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA); liposomes containing MPLA [L(MPLA)]; L(MPLA) adsorbed to aluminum salt; oil-in-water emulsion; or oil-in-water emulsion containing MPLA.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2014

Characterization and optimization of heroin hapten-BSA conjugates: method development for the synthesis of reproducible hapten-based vaccines

Oscar B. Torres; Rashmi Jalah; Kenner C. Rice; Fuying Li; Joshua F. G. Antoline; Malliga R. Iyer; Arthur E. Jacobson; Mohamed Nazim Boutaghou; Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas

A potential new treatment for drug addiction is immunization with vaccines that induce antibodies that can abrogate the addictive effects of the drug of abuse. One of the challenges in the development of a vaccine against drugs of abuse is the availability of an optimum procedure that gives reproducible and high yielding hapten-protein conjugates. In this study, a heroin/morphine surrogate hapten (MorHap) was coupled to bovine serum albumin (BSA) using maleimide-thiol chemistry. MorHap-BSA conjugates with 3, 5, 10, 15, 22, 28, and 34 haptens were obtained using different linker and hapten ratios. Using this optimized procedure, MorHap-BSA conjugates were synthesized with highly reproducible results and in high yields. The number of haptens attached to BSA was compared by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) assay, modified Ellman’s test and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Among the three methods, MALDI-TOF MS discriminated subtle differences in hapten density. The effect of hapten density on enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) performance was evaluated with seven MorHap-BSA conjugates of varying hapten densities, which were used as coating antigens. The highest antibody binding was obtained with MorHap-BSA conjugates containing 3–5 haptens. This is the first report that rigorously analyzes, optimizes and characterizes the conjugation of haptens to proteins that can be used for vaccines against drugs of abuse. The effect of hapten density on the ELISA detection of antibodies against haptens demonstrates the importance of careful characterization of the hapten density by the analytical techniques described.

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Barbara K. Felber

National Institutes of Health

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George N. Pavlakis

National Institutes of Health

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Margherita Rosati

National Institutes of Health

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Candido Alicea

National Institutes of Health

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Viraj Kulkarni

National Institutes of Health

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Carl R. Alving

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Cristina Bergamaschi

National Institutes of Health

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Gary R. Matyas

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Oscar B. Torres

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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