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Dive into the research topics where Saskia Hemmers is active.

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Featured researches published by Saskia Hemmers.


Cell | 2015

A Distinct Function of Regulatory T Cells in Tissue Protection

Nicholas Arpaia; Jesse A. Green; Bruno Moltedo; Aaron Arvey; Saskia Hemmers; Shaopeng Yuan; Piper M. Treuting; Alexander Y. Rudensky

Regulatory T (Treg) cells suppress immune responses to a broad range of non-microbial and microbial antigens and indirectly limit immune inflammation-inflicted tissue damage by employing multiple mechanisms of suppression. Here, we demonstrate that selective Treg cell deficiency in amphiregulin leads to severe acute lung damage and decreased blood oxygen concentration during influenza virus infection without any measureable alterations in Treg cell suppressor function, antiviral immune responses, or viral load. This tissue repair modality is mobilized in Treg cells in response to inflammatory mediator IL-18 or alarmin IL-33, but not by TCR signaling that is required for suppressor function. These results suggest that, during infectious lung injury, Treg cells have a major direct and non-redundant role in tissue repair and maintenance-distinct from their role in suppression of immune responses and inflammation-and that these two essential Treg cell functions are invoked by separable cues.


PLOS ONE | 2011

PAD4-Mediated Neutrophil Extracellular Trap Formation Is Not Required for Immunity against Influenza Infection

Saskia Hemmers; John R. Teijaro; Sanja Arandjelovic; Kerri A. Mowen

During an inflammatory response, neutrophils migrate to the site of infection where they can kill invading pathogens by phagocytosis, secretion of anti-microbicidal mediators or the release of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). NETs are specialized anti-microbial structures comprised of decondensed chromatin decorated with microbicidal agents. Increased amount of NETs have been found in patients suffering from the chronic lung inflammatory disease cystic fibrosis, correlating with increased severity of pulmonary obstruction. Furthermore, acute lung inflammation during influenza A infection is characterized by a massive influx of neutrophils into the lung. The role of NETs during virus-mediated lung inflammation is unknown. Peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4)-mediated deimination of histone H3 and H4 is required for NET formation. Therefore, we generated a PAD4-deficient mouse strain that has a striking inability to form NETs. These mice were infected with influenza A/WSN, and the disease was monitored at the level of leukocytic lung infiltration, lung pathology, viral replication, weight loss and mortality. PAD4 KO fared comparable to WT mice in all the parameters tested, but they displayed slight but statistically different weight loss kinetics during infection that was not reflected in enhanced survival. Overall, we conclude that PAD4-mediated NET formation is dispensable in a mouse model of influenza A infection.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

IL-2–dependent tuning of NK cell sensitivity for target cells is controlled by regulatory T cells

Georg Gasteiger; Saskia Hemmers; Matthew A. Firth; Audrey Le Floc’h; Morgan Huse; Joseph C. Sun; Alexander Y. Rudensky

IL-2–dependent adaptive-innate lymphocyte cross talk tunes NK cell reactivity and is limited by T reg cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

IL-2–dependent adaptive control of NK cell homeostasis

Georg Gasteiger; Saskia Hemmers; Paula D. Bos; Joseph C. Sun; Alexander Y. Rudensky

T reg cells restrain IL-2–mediated expansion of immature CD127+ NK cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

TCR signaling via Tec kinase ITK and interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) regulates CD8+ T-cell differentiation

Ribhu Nayar; Megan Enos; Amanda Prince; HyunMu Shin; Saskia Hemmers; Jian-kang Jiang; Ulf Klein; Craig J. Thomas; Leslie J. Berg

CD8+ T-cell development in the thymus generates a predominant population of conventional naive cells, along with minor populations of “innate” T cells that resemble memory cells. Recent studies analyzing a variety of KO or knock-in mice have indicated that impairments in the T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling pathway produce increased numbers of innate CD8+ T cells, characterized by their high expression of CD44, CD122, CXCR3, and the transcription factor, Eomesodermin (Eomes). One component of this altered development is a non-CD8+ T cell-intrinsic role for IL-4. To determine whether reduced TCR signaling within the CD8+ T cells might also contribute to this pathway, we investigated the role of the transcription factor, IFN regulatory factor 4 (IRF4). IRF4 is up-regulated following TCR stimulation in WT T cells; further, this up-regulation is impaired in T cells treated with a small-molecule inhibitor of the Tec family tyrosine kinase, IL-2 inducible T-cell kinase (ITK). In contrast to WT cells, activation of IRF4-deficient CD8+ T cells leads to rapid and robust expression of Eomes, which is further enhanced by IL-4 stimulation. In addition, inhibition of ITK together with IL-4 increases Eomeso up-regulation. These data indicate that ITK signaling promotes IRF4 up-regulation following CD8+ T-cell activation and that this signaling pathway normally suppresses Eomes expression, thereby regulating the differentiation pathway of CD8+ T cells.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Dendritic epidermal T cells regulate skin antimicrobial barrier function.

Amanda S. MacLeod; Saskia Hemmers; Olivia Garijo; Marianne Chabod; Kerri A. Mowen; Deborah A. Witherden; Wendy L. Havran

The epidermis, the outer layer of the skin, forms a physical and antimicrobial shield to protect the body from environmental threats. Skin injury severely compromises the epidermal barrier and requires immediate repair. Dendritic epidermal T cells (DETC) reside in the murine epidermis where they sense skin injury and serve as regulators and orchestrators of immune responses. Here, we determined that TCR stimulation and skin injury induces IL-17A production by a subset of DETC. This subset of IL-17A-producing DETC was distinct from IFN-γ producers, despite similar surface marker profiles. Functionally, blocking IL-17A or genetic deletion of IL-17A resulted in delayed wound closure in animals. Skin organ cultures from Tcrd-/-, which lack DETC, and Il17a-/- mice both exhibited wound-healing defects. Wound healing was fully restored by the addition of WT DETC, but only partially restored by IL-17A-deficient DETC, demonstrating the importance of IL-17A to wound healing. Following skin injury, DETC-derived IL-17A induced expression of multiple host-defense molecules in epidermal keratinocytes to promote healing. Together, these data provide a mechanistic link between IL-17A production by DETC, host-defense, and wound-healing responses in the skin. These findings establish a critical and unique role of IL-17A-producing DETC in epidermal barrier function and wound healing.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2012

PAD4 is not essential for disease in the K/BxN murine autoantibody-mediated model of arthritis.

Amanda S. Rohrbach; Saskia Hemmers; Sanja Arandjelovic; Maripat Corr; Kerri A. Mowen

IntroductionBoth murine and human genome-wide association studies have implicated peptidyl arginine deiminase (PAD4) as a susceptibility gene in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). In addition, patients with RA commonly have autoantibodies which recognize PAD4 or and/or citrullinated peptides. This study aims to evaluate the role of PAD4 in the effector phase of arthritis.MethodsPAD4 knock out (KO) and wild type (WT) C57BL/6J mice were injected with K/BxN sera to induce disease. Progression of disease was monitored by measuring paw and ankle swelling and clinical indexes of disease, and pathogenesis was assessed by indexing of clinical progression on paws collected from WT and PAD4 KO mice injected with K/BxN serum. PAD4 activity was determined by visualization of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) and immunohistological analysis of histone citrullination.ResultsPAD4 activity is readily detectable in the inflamed synovium of WT but not PAD4 deficient animals, as demonstrated by histone citrullination and NET formation. However, PAD4 WT and KO animals develop K/BxN serum transfer disease with comparable severity and kinetics, with no statistically significant differences noted in clinical scores, swelling, joint erosion or joint invasion.ConclusionsPAD4 WT and KO mice develop disease in the K/BxN serum transfer model of arthritis with similar severity and kinetics, indicating that PAD4 is dispensable in this effector phase model of disease.


Nature | 2015

A mechanism for expansion of regulatory T-cell repertoire and its role in self-tolerance

Yongqiang Feng; Joris van der Veeken; Mikhail Shugay; Ekaterina V. Putintseva; Hatice U. Osmanbeyoglu; Stanislav Dikiy; Beatrice Hoyos; Bruno Moltedo; Saskia Hemmers; Piper M. Treuting; Christina S. Leslie; Dmitriy M. Chudakov; Alexander Y. Rudensky

T-cell receptor (TCR) signalling has a key role in determining T-cell fate. Precursor cells expressing TCRs within a certain low-affinity range for complexes of self-peptide and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) undergo positive selection and differentiate into naive T cells expressing a highly diverse self-MHC-restricted TCR repertoire. In contrast, precursors displaying TCRs with a high affinity for ‘self’ are either eliminated through TCR-agonist-induced apoptosis (negative selection) or restrained by regulatory T (Treg) cells, whose differentiation and function are controlled by the X-chromosome-encoded transcription factor Foxp3 (reviewed in ref. 2). Foxp3 is expressed in a fraction of self-reactive T cells that escape negative selection in response to agonist-driven TCR signals combined with interleukin 2 (IL-2) receptor signalling. In addition to Treg cells, TCR-agonist-driven selection results in the generation of several other specialized T-cell lineages such as natural killer T cells and innate mucosal-associated invariant T cells. Although the latter exhibit a restricted TCR repertoire, Treg cells display a highly diverse collection of TCRs. Here we explore in mice whether a specialized mechanism enables agonist-driven selection of Treg cells with a diverse TCR repertoire, and the importance this holds for self-tolerance. We show that the intronic Foxp3 enhancer conserved noncoding sequence 3 (CNS3) acts as an epigenetic switch that confers a poised state to the Foxp3 promoter in precursor cells to make Treg cell lineage commitment responsive to a broad range of TCR stimuli, particularly to suboptimal ones. CNS3-dependent expansion of the TCR repertoire enables Treg cells to control self-reactive T cells effectively, especially when thymic negative selection is genetically impaired. Our findings highlight the complementary roles of these two main mechanisms of self-tolerance.


FEBS Journal | 2010

Effects of a novel arginine methyltransferase inhibitor on T‐helper cell cytokine production

Kevin Bonham; Saskia Hemmers; Yeon-Hee Lim; Dawn M. Hill; M. G. Finn; Kerri A. Mowen

The protein arginine methyltransferase (PRMT) family of enzymes catalyzes the transfer of methyl groups from S‐adenosylmethionine to the guanidino nitrogen atom of peptidylarginine to form monomethylarginine or dimethylarginine. We created several less polar analogs of the specific PRMT inhibitor arginine methylation inhibitor‐1, and one such compound was found to have improved PRMT inhibitory activity over the parent molecule. The newly identified PRMT inhibitor modulated T‐helper‐cell function and thus may serve as a lead for further inhibitors useful for the treatment of immune‐mediated disease.


Nature | 2017

Stability and function of regulatory T cells expressing the transcription factor T-bet

Andrew G. Levine; Alejandra Medoza; Saskia Hemmers; Bruno Moltedo; Rachel E. Niec; Michail Schizas; Beatrice Hoyos; Ekaterina V. Putintseva; Ashutosh Chaudhry; Stanislav Dikiy; Sho Fujisawa; Dmitriy M. Chudakov; Piper M. Treuting; Alexander Y. Rudensky

Adaptive immune responses are tailored to different types of pathogens through differentiation of naive CD4 T cells into functionally distinct subsets of effector T cells (T helper 1 (TH1), TH2, and TH17) defined by expression of the key transcription factors T-bet, GATA3, and RORγt, respectively. Regulatory T (Treg) cells comprise a distinct anti-inflammatory lineage specified by the X-linked transcription factor Foxp3 (refs 2, 3). Paradoxically, some activated Treg cells express the aforementioned effector CD4 T cell transcription factors, which have been suggested to provide Treg cells with enhanced suppressive capacity. Whether expression of these factors in Treg cells—as in effector T cells—is indicative of heterogeneity of functionally discrete and stable differentiation states, or conversely may be readily reversible, is unknown. Here we demonstrate that expression of the TH1-associated transcription factor T-bet in mouse Treg cells, induced at steady state and following infection, gradually becomes highly stable even under non-permissive conditions. Loss of function or elimination of T-bet-expressing Treg cells—but not of T-bet expression in Treg cells—resulted in severe TH1 autoimmunity. Conversely, following depletion of T-bet− Treg cells, the remaining T-bet+ cells specifically inhibited TH1 and CD8 T cell activation consistent with their co-localization with T-bet+ effector T cells. These results suggest that T-bet+ Treg cells have an essential immunosuppressive function and indicate that Treg cell functional heterogeneity is a critical feature of immunological tolerance.

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Alexander Y. Rudensky

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Kerri A. Mowen

Scripps Research Institute

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Bruno Moltedo

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Dmitriy M. Chudakov

Russian National Research Medical University

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Amanda Prince

Baylor College of Medicine

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Andrew G. Levine

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Beatrice Hoyos

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Leslie J. Berg

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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