Richard D. Hockett
University of Alabama at Birmingham
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Publication
Featured researches published by Richard D. Hockett.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1999
R. Pat Bucy; Richard D. Hockett; Cynthia A. Derdeyn; Michael S. Saag; Kathleen Squires; Michael Sillers; Ronald T. Mitsuyasu; J. Michael Kilby
Previous studies proposed a dynamic, steady-state relationship between HIV-mediated cell killing and T-cell proliferation, whereby highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) blocks viral replication and tips the balance toward CD4(+) cell repopulation. In this report, we have analyzed blood and lymph node tissues obtained concurrently from HIV-infected patients before and after initiation of HAART. Activated T cells were significantly more frequent in lymph node tissue compared with blood at both time points. Ten weeks after HAART, the absolute number of lymphocytes per excised lymph node decreased, whereas the number of lymphocytes in the blood tended to increase. The relative proportions of lymphoid subsets were not significantly changed in tissue or blood by HAART. The expression levels of mRNA for several proinflammatory cytokines (IFN-gamma, IL-1beta, IL-6, and macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha) were lower after HAART. After therapy, the expression of VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 -- adhesion molecules known to mediate lymphocyte sequestration in lymphoid tissue -- was also dramatically reduced. These data provide evidence suggesting that initial increases in blood CD4(+) cell counts on HAART are due to redistribution and that this redistribution is mediated by resolution of the immune activation that had sequestered T cells within lymphoid tissues.
Immunity | 1999
Arman Saparov; Fred Wagner; Rui Zheng; James R. Oliver; Hiroko Maeda; Richard D. Hockett; Casey T. Weaver
Single cell studies have identified intraclonal heterogeneity of cytokine production by activated T cells. To investigate implications of cytokine heterogeneity for cell fate, an interleukin (IL)-2 promoter-green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter transgenic model was developed to track IL-2+ and IL-2- T cells during differentiation from naive precursors. Antigen-activated IL-2+ and IL-2- cells had comparable proliferative capacities in primary responses. However, T cells that expressed IL-2 in primary responses demonstrated enhanced antigenic sensitivity and increased expression of effector cytokines in secondary responses in vitro and in vivo. Thus, heterogeneity of activation during a primary response translates into heterogeneous secondary responses, in which enhanced memory/effector function is linked to cells that previously exceeded an activation threshold associated with IL-2 gene transcription.
Journal of Immunology | 2001
Robin Dzialo-Hatton; Jeffrey Milbrandt; Richard D. Hockett; Casey T. Weaver
Inducible expression of Fas ligand (CD95 ligand) by activated T cells and the resulting apoptosis of CD95-bearing cells is a critical component of peripheral T cell homeostasis and cytotoxic effector mechanisms. Transcriptional control of the expression of Fas ligand has been attributed to a number of factors, including early growth response gene 2 (Egr2), Egr3, Sp1, and NF-AT, although a direct contribution of NF-AT is controversial. The present study confirms a role for Egr factors and indicates that NF-AT is essential for optimal expression of murine Fas ligand through a direct interaction with an NF-AT consensus element. The role of these factors was further defined by studying the differential expression of Fas ligand in Th1 and Th2 lines derived from DO11.10 TCR transgenic mice. EMSA analyses of a composite Egr/NF-AT site showed recruitment of Sp1 to this site in Th2 cells, but not in Th1 cells. Furthermore, gel-shift analyses demonstrated the binding of Egr1, 2, and 3 in Th2 cells and Egr1 and 2, but not Egr3 in Th1 cells at a known Egr site. Northern analysis corroborated the lack of Egr3 in Th1 cells. Differential usage of these transcription factors by Th1 and Th2 cells suggests a potential mechanism underlying the differential expression of Fas ligand by distinct T cell lineages.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999
Cynthia A. Derdeyn; J. Michael Kilby; G. Diego Miralles; Li-Fang Li; Greg Sfakianos; Michael S. Saag; Richard D. Hockett; R. Pat Bucy
Virus reservoirs can persist in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected subjects despite effective plasma virus suppression. To compare viral dynamics in the absence and presence of antiretroviral therapy, blood mononuclear cells from 19 subjects with high plasma RNA levels and 18 subjects following prolonged virus suppression were examined, by use of in situ hybridization, to detect virus RNA expression before and after in vitro T cell activation. This approach reveals circulating lymphocytes expressing HIV-1 RNA before activation and an increase in cells with detectable HIV-1 RNA transcription after in vitro activation. The frequencies of these 2 cell populations are strongly correlated with plasma virus load and appear to be stable once a new steady state is established during therapy. The frequency of viral RNA-positive cells is equivalent to the frequency of cells that produce infectious virus. Thus, in HIV-1-infected subjects there are distinct virus reservoirs comprising both latent and replication-active cells.
Immunologic Research | 1998
Casey T. Weaver; Arman Saparov; Lisa A. Kraus; William O. Rogers; Richard D. Hockett; R. Pat Bucy
The T cell can be defined in the context of two properties—the recognition specificity of the T cell receptor (TCR) heterodimer and the functional response of the T cell after TCR stimulation. Once a particular TCR heterodimer is expressed and successfully selected during thymic development, the antigen specificity is fixed for all the clonal progeny of that cell. In contrast, the potential functional responses that may be generated in response to specific antigen in the postthymic environment are quite extensive. These range from programmed cell death to initiation of alternate programs of phenotype development that generate effector populations with distinct cytokine expression patterns and regulatory properties. Recent advances in analytical methods that have permitted multiparametric characterizations of the T cell response at the single cell, rather than population level, have necessitated a modified view of T cell activation and the clonal T cell response, and have generated new insights into the regulation of immunity. In this brief review, we highlight studies that have characterized heterogeneity of the CD4+ T cell clonal response based on single-cell analyses, and discuss implications for models of T cell activation and cytokine phenotype development.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1999
Richard D. Hockett; J. Michael Kilby; Cynthia A. Derdeyn; Michael S. Saag; Michael Sillers; Kathleen Squires; Scott Chiz; Martin A. Nowak; George M. Shaw; R. Pat Bucy
Journal of Immunology | 1999
Takayuki Kubota; Jin-yi Wang; Thomas W. Göbel; Richard D. Hockett; Max D. Cooper; Chen-lo H. Chen
Infection and Immunity | 1998
Leigh W. Kent; Firoz Rahemtulla; Richard D. Hockett; Rebecca C. Gilleland; Suzanne M. Michalek
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1997
Karen M. Janowski; Stephanie Ledbetter; Matthew S. Mayo; Richard D. Hockett
BioTechniques | 1998
Rebecca C. Gilleland; Richard D. Hockett