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Dive into the research topics where Soo Han is active.

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Featured researches published by Soo Han.


Vaccine | 2012

A virus-like particle vaccine platform elicits heightened and hastened local lung mucosal antibody production after a single dose

Laura Richert; Amy E. Servid; Ann Harmsen; Agnieszka Rynda-Apple; Soo Han; James A. Wiley; Trevor Douglas; Allen G. Harmsen

Abstract We show that a model antigen, ovalbumin (OVA), can be chemically conjugated to the exterior of a small heat shock protein (sHsp) cage that has structural similarities to virus-like particles (VLPs). OVA–sHsp conjugation efficiency was dependent upon the stoichiometry and the length of the small molecule linker utilized, and the attachment position on the sHsp cage. When conjugated OVA–sHsp was delivered intranasally to naïve mice, the resulting immune response to OVA was accelerated and intensified, and OVA-specific IgG1 responses were apparent within 5 days after a single immunizing dose, illustrating its utility for vaccine development. If animals were pretreated with a disparate VLP, P22 (a non-replicative bacteriophage capsid), before OVA–sHsp conjugate immunization, OVA-specific IgG1 responses were apparent already by 4 days after a single immunizing dose of conjugate in OVA-naïve mice. Additionally, the mice pretreated with P22 produced high titer mucosal IgA, and isotype-switched OVA-specific serum IgG. Similarly, sHsp pretreatment enhanced the accumulation of lung germinal center B cells, T follicular helper cells, and increased polymeric Ig receptor expression, priming the lungs for subsequent IgG and IgA responses to influenza virus challenge. Thus, sHsp nanoparticles elicited quick and intense antibody responses and these accelerated responses could similarly be induced to antigen chemically conjugated to the sHsp. Pretreatment of mice with P22 further accelerated the onset of the antibody response to OVA–sHsp, demonstrating the utility of conjugating antigens to VLPs for pre-, or possibly post-exposure prophylaxis of lung, all without the need for adjuvant.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Type-I IFN signaling suppresses an excessive IFN-γ response and thus prevents lung damage and chronic inflammation during Pneumocystis (PC) clearance in CD4 T cell-competent mice.

Nicole Meissner; Steve D. Swain; Kate McInnerney; Soo Han; Allen G. Harmsen

Immune-reconstitution after highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is often incomplete, and some HIV-infected individuals fail to regenerate type-I interferon (IFN)-producing pDCs. We recently demonstrated that during Pneumocystis (PC) infection in CD4 T cell-competent mice the absence of type-I IFN signaling results in chronic pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis despite clearance. Because the mechanisms involved are poorly understood, we further characterized the role of type-I IFN signaling in immune responses to PC. We show that type-I IFN signaling around day 7 postinfection is critical to the outcome of inflammation. Microarray analysis of pulmonary CD11c(+) cells revealed that at day 7 post infection, wild-type cells up-regulated type-I IFN-responsive genes as well as SOCS1, which is a critical negative-regulator of type-I IFN and IFN-gamma signaling. This was associated with an eosinophilic lung inflammation, PC clearance, and complete restitution. However, pulmonary CD11c(+) cells from IFNAR(-/-) mice demonstrated increased tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha production and lacked SOCS1-induction at day 7. This was followed by a transient lymphocytic and IFN-gamma response before switching to a chronic eosinophilic inflammation of the lung. Early neutralization of TNF-alpha did not prevent chronic inflammation in IFNAR(-/-) mice, but treatment with an anti-IFN-gamma antibody did. We propose that during PC lung infection type-I IFNs induce SOCS1-associated regulatory mechanisms, which prevent excessive IFN-gamma-mediated responses that cause chronic lung damage. Therefore, partial immune-reconstitution in AIDS, attributable to reduced type-I IFN actions, might disrupt regulatory aspects of inflammation, causing unexplained chronic pulmonary complications as seen in some patients during HAART.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

CD8 T Cell-Mediated Lung Damage in Response to the Extracellular Pathogen Pneumocystis Is Dependent on MHC Class I Expression by Radiation-Resistant Lung Cells

Nicole Meissner; Frances E. Lund; Soo Han; Allen G. Harmsen

Pneumocystis, a fungal, extracellular pathogen causes a life-threatening pneumonia in patients with severe immunodeficiencies. In the absence of CD4 T cells, Pneumocystis infection results in vigorous CD8 T cell influx into the alveolar and interstitial spaces of the lung. This response results in lung damage characterized by low pO2 and albumin leakage into the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid similar to other CD8 T cell-mediated interstitial lung diseases. How this extracellular pathogen elicits a CD8 T cell response is not clear, and it was the aim of our study to determine the Ag specificity of the recruited CD8 T cells and to determine whether MHC class I (MHC I) expression was necessary to initiate lung damage. Using an adoptive T cell-transfer model with either polyclonal wild-type CD8 T cells or transgenic influenza virus-specific CD8 T cells we found that CD8 T cell recruitment is Ag-specific and requires the continuous presence of the Pneumocystis pathogen. Bone marrow chimera experiments using Rag-1 and β2-microglobulin-deficient mice as hosts demonstrated a requirement for MHC I expression on nonbone marrow-derived cells of the lung. This suggests either direct processing of Pneumocystis Ags by nonbone marrow-derived cells of the lung or the induction of lung damage triggered by a lung-specific autoantigen. Using perforin-, Fas-, and IFN-γ-deficient animals, we showed that these molecules are not directly involved in the CD8-mediated lung damage. However, CD8 T cell-mediated lung damage is Ag-specific is induced by a MHC I-expressing nonbone marrow-derived cell in the lung and is dependent on the continued presence of live Pneumocystis.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Type I Interferon Signaling and B Cells Maintain Hemopoiesis during Pneumocystis Infection of the Lung

Nicole Meissner; Melanie R. Rutkowski; Ann Harmsen; Soo Han; Allen G. Harmsen

Loss of CD4 T cells is the hallmark of HIV infection. However, type I IFN-producing plasmacytoid dendritic cells may also be lost. This results in susceptibility to an opportunistic infection such as Pneumocystis pneumonia. In addition, regenerative bone marrow failure resulting in pancytopenia is another common problem in advanced stage AIDS. This may be linked to both the failing immune system and recurrent opportunistic infections. We generated lymphocyte-deficient type I IFN receptor-deficient mice (IFrag−/−) to study the effects on Pneumocystis infection of the lung. When IFrag−/− animals were infected with Pneumocystis they died between days 16 and 21 postinfection with minimal pneumonia but severe anemia due to complete bone marrow failure. This included the loss of uncommitted hemopoietic precursor cells. Bone marrow failure was prevented by the reconstitution of IFrag−/− mice with wild-type lymphocytes, especially B cells. T and B cells lacking type I IFN receptor signaling could only partially prevent bone marrow failure in response to Pneumocystis infection. However, the presence of T and B cells lacking type I IFN signaling resulted in compensatory extramedullary hemopoiesis in the liver and spleen. Lymphocyte support of the regenerative capacity of the bone marrow was provided by both type I IFN-dependent and -independent mechanisms that acted synergistically. Our findings point to the requirement of both type I IFNs and lymphocytes in the regenerative capabilities of the hemopoietic system under the pressure of Pneumocystis infection, but not during steady-state hemopoiesis. This may have implications in the management of pancytopenia in AIDS.


Infection and Immunity | 2011

Pneumocystis Infection in an Immunocompetent Host Can Promote Collateral Sensitization to Respiratory Antigens

Steve D. Swain; Nicole Meissner; Soo Han; Allen G. Harmsen

ABSTRACT Infection with the opportunistic fungal pathogen Pneumocystis is assumed to pass without persistent pathology in immunocompetent hosts. However, when immunocompetent BALB/c mice were inoculated with Pneumocystis, a vigorous Th2-like pulmonary inflammation ensued and peaked at 14 days postinfection. This coincided with a 10-fold increase in the number of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in the lung, and these cells were capable of presenting antigen in vitro, as well as greater uptake of antigen in vivo. When mice were presented with exogenous antigen at the 14-day time point of the infection, they developed respiratory sensitization to that antigen, in the form of increased airway hyperresponsiveness upon a later challenge, whereas mice not infected but presented with antigen did not. Like other forms of collateral sensitization, this response was dependent on interleukin-4 receptor signaling. This ability to facilitate sensitization to exogenous antigen has been previously reported for other infectious disease agents; however, Pneumocystis appears to be uniquely capable in this respect, as a single intranasal dose without added adjuvant, when it was administered at the appropriate time, was sufficient to initiate sensitization. Pneumocystis infection probably occurs in most humans during the first few years of life, and in the vast majority of cases, it fails to cause any overt direct pathology. However, as we show here, Pneumocystis can be an agent of comorbidity at this time by facilitating respiratory sensitization that may relate to the later development or exacerbation of obstructive airway disease.


European Journal of Immunology | 2014

CD11c+ cells primed with unrelated antigens facilitate an accelerated immune response to influenza virus in mice

Laura Richert; Agnieszka Rynda-Apple; Ann Harmsen; Soo Han; James A. Wiley; Trevor Douglas; Kyle Larson; Rachelle V. Morton; Allen G. Harmsen

Recent evidence suggests that an individuals unique history and sequence of exposures to pathogens and antigens may dictate downstream immune responses to disparate antigens. We show that the i.n. delivery of nonreplicative virus‐like particles (VLPs), which bear structural but no antigenic similarities to respiratory pathogens, acts to prime the lungs of both C56BL/6 and BALB/c mice, facilitating heightened and accelerated primary immune responses to high‐dose influenza challenge, thus providing a nonpathogenic model of innate imprinting. These responses correspond closely to those observed following natural infection with the opportunistic fungus, Pneumocystis murina, and are characterized by accelerated antigen processing by DCs and alveolar macrophages, an enhanced influx of cells to the local tracheobronchial lymph node, and early upregulation of T‐cell co‐stimulatory/adhesion molecules. CD11c+ cells, which have been directly exposed to VLPs or Pneumocystis are necessary in facilitating enhanced clearance of influenza virus, and the repopulation of the lung by Ly‐6C+ precursors relies on CCR2 expression. Thus, immune imprinting 72 h after VLP‐priming, or 2 weeks after Pneumocystis‐priming is CCR2‐mediated and results from the enhanced antigen processing, maturation, and trafficking abilities of DCs and alveolar macrophages, which cause accelerated influenza‐specific primary immune responses and result in superior viral clearance.


American Journal of Pathology | 2014

CD4+ T Cells and IFN-γ Are Required for the Development of Pneumocystis-Associated Pulmonary Hypertension

Steve D. Swain; Dan W. Siemsen; Rebecca R. Pullen; Soo Han

Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a disease of diverse etiology. Although primary PH can develop in the absence of prior disease, PH more commonly develops in conjunction with other pulmonary pathologies. We previously reported a mouse model in which PH occurs as a sequela of Pneumocystis infection in the context of transient CD4 depletion. Here, we report that instead of the expected Th2 pathways, the Th1 cytokine IFN-γ is essential for the development of PH, as wild-type mice developed PH but IFN-γ knockout mice did not. Because gene expression analysis showed few strain differences that were not immune-function related, we focused on those responses as potential pathologic mechanisms. In addition to dependence on IFN-γ, we found that when CD4 cells were continuously depleted, but infection was limited by antibiotic treatment, PH did not occur, confirming that CD4 T cells are required for PH development. Also, although CD8 T-cells are implicated in the pathology of Pneumocystis pneumonia, they did not have a role in the onset of PH. Finally, we found differences in immune cell phenotypes that correlated with PH, including elevated CD204 expression in lung CD11c(+) cells, but their role remains unclear. Overall, we demonstrate that a transient, localized, immune response requiring IFN-γ and CD4-T cells can disrupt pulmonary vascular function and promote lingering PH.


European Journal of Immunology | 2014

Both infection with Pneumocystis and virus-like particle exposure prime pulmonary CD11c+ cells, facilitating accelerated immune responses to influenza

Laura Richert; Agnieszka Rynda-Apple; Ann Harmsen; Soo Han; James A. Wiley; Trevor Douglas; Kyle Larson; Rachelle V. Morton; Allen G. Harmsen

Recent evidence suggests that an individuals unique history and sequence of exposures to pathogens and antigens may dictate downstream immune responses to disparate antigens. We show that the i.n. delivery of nonreplicative virus‐like particles (VLPs), which bear structural but no antigenic similarities to respiratory pathogens, acts to prime the lungs of both C56BL/6 and BALB/c mice, facilitating heightened and accelerated primary immune responses to high‐dose influenza challenge, thus providing a nonpathogenic model of innate imprinting. These responses correspond closely to those observed following natural infection with the opportunistic fungus, Pneumocystis murina, and are characterized by accelerated antigen processing by DCs and alveolar macrophages, an enhanced influx of cells to the local tracheobronchial lymph node, and early upregulation of T‐cell co‐stimulatory/adhesion molecules. CD11c+ cells, which have been directly exposed to VLPs or Pneumocystis are necessary in facilitating enhanced clearance of influenza virus, and the repopulation of the lung by Ly‐6C+ precursors relies on CCR2 expression. Thus, immune imprinting 72 h after VLP‐priming, or 2 weeks after Pneumocystis‐priming is CCR2‐mediated and results from the enhanced antigen processing, maturation, and trafficking abilities of DCs and alveolar macrophages, which cause accelerated influenza‐specific primary immune responses and result in superior viral clearance.


European Journal of Immunology | 2014

CD11c+cells primed with unrelated antigens facilitate an accelerated immune response to influenza virus in mice: Immunity to infection

Laura Richert; Agnieszka Rynda-Apple; Ann Harmsen; Soo Han; James A. Wiley; Trevor Douglas; Kyle Larson; Rachelle V. Morton; Allen G. Harmsen

Recent evidence suggests that an individuals unique history and sequence of exposures to pathogens and antigens may dictate downstream immune responses to disparate antigens. We show that the i.n. delivery of nonreplicative virus‐like particles (VLPs), which bear structural but no antigenic similarities to respiratory pathogens, acts to prime the lungs of both C56BL/6 and BALB/c mice, facilitating heightened and accelerated primary immune responses to high‐dose influenza challenge, thus providing a nonpathogenic model of innate imprinting. These responses correspond closely to those observed following natural infection with the opportunistic fungus, Pneumocystis murina, and are characterized by accelerated antigen processing by DCs and alveolar macrophages, an enhanced influx of cells to the local tracheobronchial lymph node, and early upregulation of T‐cell co‐stimulatory/adhesion molecules. CD11c+ cells, which have been directly exposed to VLPs or Pneumocystis are necessary in facilitating enhanced clearance of influenza virus, and the repopulation of the lung by Ly‐6C+ precursors relies on CCR2 expression. Thus, immune imprinting 72 h after VLP‐priming, or 2 weeks after Pneumocystis‐priming is CCR2‐mediated and results from the enhanced antigen processing, maturation, and trafficking abilities of DCs and alveolar macrophages, which cause accelerated influenza‐specific primary immune responses and result in superior viral clearance.


American Journal of Pathology | 2007

Pulmonary Hypertension Can Be a Sequela of Prior Pneumocystis Pneumonia

Steve D. Swain; Soo Han; Ann Harmsen; Katie Shampeny; Allen G. Harmsen

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Ann Harmsen

Montana State University

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Steve D. Swain

Montana State University

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James A. Wiley

Montana State University

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Trevor Douglas

Indiana University Bloomington

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Kyle Larson

Montana State University

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Dan W. Siemsen

Montana State University

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