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Dive into the research topics where Sean R. McMaster is active.

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Featured researches published by Sean R. McMaster.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Airway-Resident Memory CD8 T Cells Provide Antigen-Specific Protection against Respiratory Virus Challenge through Rapid IFN-γ Production

Sean R. McMaster; Jarad J. Wilson; Hong Wang; Jacob E. Kohlmeier

CD8 airway resident memory T (TRM) cells are a distinctive TRM population with a high turnover rate and a unique phenotype influenced by their localization within the airways. Their role in mediating protective immunity to respiratory pathogens, although suggested by many studies, has not been directly proven. This study provides definitive evidence that airway CD8 TRM cells are sufficient to mediate protection against respiratory virus challenge. Despite being poorly cytolytic in vivo and failing to expand after encountering Ag, airway CD8 TRM cells rapidly express effector cytokines, with IFN-γ being produced most robustly. Notably, established airway CD8 TRM cells possess the ability to produce IFN-γ faster than systemic effector memory CD8 T cells. Furthermore, naive mice receiving intratracheal transfer of airway CD8 TRM cells lacking the ability to produce IFN-γ were less effective at controlling pathogen load upon heterologous challenge. This direct evidence of airway CD8 TRM cell–mediated protection demonstrates the importance of these cells as a first line of defense for optimal immunity against respiratory pathogens and suggests they should be considered in the development of future cell-mediated vaccines.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Specific niches for lung-resident memory CD8+ T cells at the site of tissue regeneration enable CD69-independent maintenance.

Shiki Takamura; Hideki Yagi; Yoshiyuki Hakata; Chihiro Motozono; Sean R. McMaster; Tomoko Masumoto; Makoto Fujisawa; Tomomi Chikaishi; Junko Komeda; Jun Itoh; Miki Umemura; Ami Kyusai; Michio Tomura; Toshinori Nakayama; David L. Woodland; Jacob E. Kohlmeier; Masaaki Miyazawa

Takamura et al. show that most lung CD8+ TRM cells are not maintained in the inducible bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue (iBALT) but are maintained in specific niches created at the site of tissue regeneration, which are termed as repair-associated memory depots (RAMDs).


Vaccine | 2015

Enhanced immune responses by skin vaccination with influenza subunit vaccine in young hosts

Dimitrios G. Koutsonanos; E. Stein Esser; Sean R. McMaster; Priya Kalluri; Jeong Woo Lee; Mark R. Prausnitz; Ioanna Skountzou; Timothy L. Denning; Jacob E. Kohlmeier; Richard W. Compans

Skin has gained substantial attention as a vaccine target organ due to its immunological properties, which include a high density of professional antigen presenting cells (APCs). Previous studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of this vaccination route not only in animal models but also in adults. Young children represent a population group that is at high risk from influenza infection. As a result, this group could benefit significantly from influenza vaccine delivery approaches through the skin and the improved immune response it can induce. In this study, we compared the immune responses in young BALB/c mice upon skin delivery of influenza vaccine with vaccination by the conventional intramuscular route. Young mice that received 5μg of H1N1 A/Ca/07/09 influenza subunit vaccine using MN demonstrated an improved serum antibody response (IgG1 and IgG2a) when compared to the young IM group, accompanied by higher numbers of influenza-specific antibody secreting cells (ASCs) in the bone marrow. In addition, we observed increased activation of follicular helper T cells and formation of germinal centers in the regional lymph nodes in the MN immunized group, rapid clearance of the virus from their lungs as well as complete survival, compared with partial protection observed in the IM-vaccinated group. Our results support the hypothesis that influenza vaccine delivery through the skin would be beneficial for protecting the high-risk young population from influenza infection.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Memory T Cells Generated by Prior Exposure to Influenza Cross React with the Novel H7N9 Influenza Virus and Confer Protective Heterosubtypic Immunity

Sean R. McMaster; Jon D. Gabbard; Dimitris G. Koutsonanos; Richard W. Compans; Ralph A. Tripp; S. Mark Tompkins; Jacob E. Kohlmeier

Influenza virus is a source of significant health and economic burden from yearly epidemics and sporadic pandemics. Given the potential for the emerging H7N9 influenza virus to cause severe respiratory infections and the lack of exposure to H7 and N9 influenza viruses in the human population, we aimed to quantify the H7N9 cross-reactive memory T cell reservoir in humans and mice previously exposed to common circulating influenza viruses. We identified significant cross-reactive T cell populations in humans and mice; we also found that cross-reactive memory T cells afforded heterosubtypic protection by reducing morbidity and mortality upon lethal H7N9 challenge. In context with our observation that PR8-primed mice have limited humoral cross-reactivity with H7N9, our data suggest protection from H7N9 challenge is indeed mediated by cross-reactive T cell populations established upon previous priming with another influenza virus. Thus, pre-existing cross-reactive memory T cells may limit disease severity in the event of an H7N9 influenza virus pandemic.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2016

Mathematical Model Reveals the Role of Memory CD8 T Cell Populations in Recall Responses to Influenza.

Veronika I. Zarnitsyna; Andreas Handel; Sean R. McMaster; Sarah L. Hayward; Jacob E. Kohlmeier; Rustom Antia

The current influenza vaccine provides narrow protection against the strains included in the vaccine, and needs to be reformulated every few years in response to the constantly evolving new strains. Novel approaches are directed toward developing vaccines that provide broader protection by targeting B and T cell epitopes that are conserved between different strains of the virus. In this paper, we focus on developing mathematical models to explore the CD8 T cell responses to influenza, how they can be boosted, and the conditions under which they contribute to protection. Our models suggest that the interplay between spatial heterogeneity (with the virus infecting the respiratory tract and the immune response being generated in the secondary lymphoid organs) and T cell differentiation (with proliferation occurring in the lymphoid organs giving rise to a subpopulation of resident T cells in the respiratory tract) is the key to understand the dynamics of protection afforded by the CD8 T cell response to influenza. Our results suggest that the time lag for the generation of resident T cells in the respiratory tract and their rate of decay following infection are the key factors that limit the efficacy of CD8 T cell responses. The models predict that an increase in the level of central memory T cells leads to a gradual decrease in the viral load, and, in contrast, there is a sharper protection threshold for the relationship between the size of the population of resident T cells and protection. The models also suggest that repeated natural influenza infections cause the number of central memory CD8 T cells and the peak number of resident memory CD8 T cells to reach their plateaus, and while the former is maintained, the latter decays with time since the most recent infection.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Viral Escape Mutant Epitope Maintains TCR Affinity for Antigen yet Curtails CD8 T Cell Responses

Shayla K. Shorter; Frederick J. Schnell; Sean R. McMaster; David F. Pinelli; Rakieb Andargachew; Brian D. Evavold

T cells have the remarkable ability to recognize antigen with great specificity and in turn mount an appropriate and robust immune response. Critical to this process is the initial T cell antigen recognition and subsequent signal transduction events. This antigen recognition can be modulated at the site of TCR interaction with peptide:major histocompatibility (pMHC) or peptide interaction with the MHC molecule. Both events could have a range of effects on T cell fate. Though responses to antigens that bind sub-optimally to TCR, known as altered peptide ligands (APL), have been studied extensively, the impact of disrupting antigen binding to MHC has been highlighted to a lesser extent and is usually considered to result in complete loss of epitope recognition. Here we present a model of viral evasion from CD8 T cell immuno-surveillance by a lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) escape mutant with an epitope for which TCR affinity for pMHC remains high but where the antigenic peptide binds sub optimally to MHC. Despite high TCR affinity for variant epitope, levels of interferon regulatory factor-4 (IRF4) are not sustained in response to the variant indicating differences in perceived TCR signal strength. The CD8+ T cell response to the variant epitope is characterized by early proliferation and up-regulation of activation markers. Interestingly, this response is not maintained and is characterized by a lack in IL-2 and IFNγ production, increased apoptosis and an abrogated glycolytic response. We show that disrupting the stability of peptide in MHC can effectively disrupt TCR signal strength despite unchanged affinity for TCR and can significantly impact the CD8+ T cell response to a viral escape mutant.


Mucosal Immunology | 2018

Pulmonary antigen encounter regulates the establishment of tissue-resident CD8 memory T cells in the lung airways and parenchyma

Sean R. McMaster; Alexander N. Wein; Paul Dunbar; Sarah L. Hayward; Emily K. Cartwright; Timothy L. Denning; Jacob E. Kohlmeier

Resident memory CD8 T (TRM) cells in the lung parenchyma (LP) and airways provide heterologous protection against influenza virus challenge. However, scant knowledge exists regarding factors necessary to establish and maintain lung CD8 TRM. Here we demonstrate that, in contrast to mechanisms described for other tissues, airway, and LP CD8 TRM establishment requires cognate antigen recognition in the lung. Systemic effector CD8 T cells could be transiently pulled into the lung in response to localized inflammation, however these effector cells failed to establish tissue residency unless antigen was present in the pulmonary environment. The interaction of effector CD8 T cells with cognate antigen in the lung resulted in increased and prolonged expression of the tissue-retention markers CD69 and CD103, and increased expression of the adhesion molecule VLA-1. The inability of localized inflammation alone to establish lung TRM resulted in decreased viral clearance and increased mortality following heterosubtypic influenza challenge, despite equal numbers of circulating memory CD8 T cells. These findings demonstrate that pulmonary antigen encounter is required for the establishment of lung CD8 TRM and may inform future vaccine strategies to generate robust cellular immunity against respiratory pathogens.


Journal of Immunology | 2018

IL-36γ Protects against Severe Influenza Infection by Promoting Lung Alveolar Macrophage Survival and Limiting Viral Replication

Alexander N. Wein; Paul Dunbar; Sean R. McMaster; Zheng-Rong Tiger Li; Timothy L. Denning; Jacob E. Kohlmeier

Although influenza virus infection remains a concerning disease for public health, the roles of individual cytokines during the immune response to influenza infection are not fully understood. We have identified IL-36γ as a key mediator of immune protection during both high- and low-pathogenesis influenza infection. Il36g mRNA is upregulated in the lung following influenza infection, and mice lacking IL-36γ have greatly increased morbidity and mortality upon infection with either H1N1 or H3N2 influenza. The increased severity of influenza infection in IL-36γ–knockout (KO) mice is associated with increased viral titers, higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines early in infection, and more diffuse pathologic conditions late in the disease course. Interestingly, the increased severity of disease in IL-36γ–KO mice correlates with a rapid loss of alveolar macrophages following infection. We find that the alveolar macrophages from naive IL-36γ–KO mice have higher expression of M2-like surface markers compared with wild-type (WT) mice and show increased apoptosis within 24 h of infection. Finally, transfer of WT alveolar macrophages to IL-36γ–KO mice restores protection against lethal influenza challenge to levels observed in WT mice. Together, these data identify a critical role for IL-36γ in immunity against influenza virus and demonstrate the importance of IL-36γ signaling for alveolar macrophage survival during infection.


Cell Reports | 2016

A Distinct Lung-Interstitium-Resident Memory CD8+ T Cell Subset Confers Enhanced Protection to Lower Respiratory Tract Infection

Pavlo Gilchuk; Timothy Hill; Clifford S. Guy; Sean R. McMaster; Kelli L. Boyd; Whitney A. Rabacal; Pengcheng Lu; Yu Shyr; Jacob E. Kohlmeier; Eric Sebzda; Douglas R. Green; Sebastian Joyce


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Local antigen and inflammation in the lung induce the preferential establishment and maintenance of CXCR6 and CD49a-expressing antigen-specific CD8 TRM cells in the lung parenchyma and airways (MUC1P.900)

Sean R. McMaster; Jarad J. Wilson; Alex Wein; Paul Dunbar; Mehrdad Matloubian; Jacob E. Kohlmeier

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