Stephen I. Alexander
Children's Hospital at Westmead
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stephen I. Alexander.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006
Nabila Seddiki; Brigitte Santner-Nanan; Jeff Martinson; John Zaunders; Sarah C. Sasson; Alan Landay; Michael J. Solomon; Warwick Selby; Stephen I. Alexander; Ralph Nanan; Anthony D. Kelleher; Barbara Fazekas de St Groth
Abnormalities in CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T (T reg) cells have been implicated in susceptibility to allergic, autoimmune, and immunoinflammatory conditions. However, phenotypic and functional assessment of human T reg cells has been hampered by difficulty in distinguishing between CD25-expressing activated and regulatory T cells. Here, we show that expression of CD127, the α chain of the interleukin-7 receptor, allows an unambiguous flow cytometry–based distinction to be made between CD127lo T reg cells and CD127hi conventional T cells within the CD25+CD45RO+RA− effector/memory and CD45RA+RO− naive compartments in peripheral blood and lymph node. In healthy volunteers, peripheral blood CD25+CD127lo cells comprised 6.35 ± 0.26% of CD4+ T cells, of which 2.05 ± 0.14% expressed the naive subset marker CD45RA. Expression of FoxP3 protein and the CD127lo phenotype were highly correlated within the CD4+CD25+ population. Moreover, both effector/memory and naive CD25+CD127lo cells manifested suppressive activity in vitro, whereas CD25+CD127hi cells did not. Cell surface expression of CD127 therefore allows accurate estimation of T reg cell numbers and isolation of pure populations for in vitro studies and should contribute to our understanding of regulatory abnormalities in immunopathic diseases.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007
Huiling Wu; Gang Chen; Kate Wyburn; Jianlin Yin; Patrick Bertolino; Josette Eris; Stephen I. Alexander; Alexandra F. Sharland; Steven J. Chadban
Ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) may activate innate immunity through the engagement of TLRs by endogenous ligands. TLR4 expressed within the kidney is a potential mediator of innate activation and inflammation. Using a mouse model of kidney IRI, we demonstrated a significant increase in TLR4 expression by tubular epithelial cells (TECs) and infiltrating leukocytes within the kidney following ischemia. TLR4 signaling through the MyD88-dependent pathway was required for the full development of kidney IRI, as both TLR4(-/-) and MyD88(-/-) mice were protected against kidney dysfunction, tubular damage, neutrophil and macrophage accumulation, and expression of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. In vitro, WT kidney TECs produced proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines and underwent apoptosis after ischemia. These effects were attenuated in TLR4(-/-) and MyD88(-/-) TECs. In addition, we demonstrated upregulation of the endogenous ligands high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), hyaluronan, and biglycan, providing circumstantial evidence that one or more of these ligands may be the source of TLR4 activation. To determine the relative contribution of TLR4 expression by parenchymal cells or leukocytes to kidney damage during IRI, we generated chimeric mice. TLR4(-/-) mice engrafted with WT hematopoietic cells had significantly lower serum creatinine and less tubular damage than WT mice reconstituted with TLR4(-/-) BM, suggesting that TLR4 signaling in intrinsic kidney cells plays the dominant role in mediating kidney damage.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010
Brian J. Nankivell; Stephen I. Alexander
This review gives an account of our current understanding of the mechanisms of rejection of renal allografts. New immunosuppressive agents show promise, but graft survival beyond 5 years has not improved substantially.
American Journal of Pathology | 2009
Guoping Zheng; James Guy Lyons; Thian Kui Tan; Yiping Wang; Tzu-Ting Hsu; Danqing Min; Lena Succar; Gopala K. Rangan; Min Hu; Beric R. Henderson; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris
Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) plays an important role in organ fibrosis, including that of the kidney. Loss of E-cadherin expression is a hallmark of EMT; however, whether the loss of E-cadherin is a consequence or a cause of EMT remains unknown, especially in the renal system. In this study, we show that transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1-induced EMT in renal tubular epithelial cells is dependent on proteolysis. Matrix metalloproteinase-mediated E-cadherin disruption led directly to tubular epithelial cell EMT via Slug. TGF-beta1 induced the proteolytic shedding of E-cadherin, which caused the nuclear translocation of beta-catenin, the transcriptional induction of Slug, and the repression of E-cadherin transcription in tubular epithelial cells. These findings reveal a direct role for E-cadherin and for matrix metalloproteinases in causing EMT downstream of TGF-beta1 in fibrotic disease. Specific inhibition rather than activation of matrix metalloproteinases may offer a novel approach for treatment of fibrotic disease.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010
Qi Cao; Y. M. Wang; Dong Zheng; Yan Sun; Vincent W.S. Lee; Guoping Zheng; Thian Kui Tan; J. Ince; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris
IL-10/TGF-beta-modified macrophages, a subset of activated macrophages, produce anti-inflammatory cytokines, suggesting that they may protect against inflammation-mediated injury. Here, macrophages modified ex vivo by IL-10/TGF-beta (IL-10/TGF-beta Mu2) significantly attenuated renal inflammation, structural injury, and functional decline in murine adriamycin nephrosis (AN). These cells deactivated effector macrophages and inhibited CD4+ T cell proliferation. IL-10/TGF-beta Mu2 expressed high levels of the regulatory co-stimulatory molecule B7-H4, induced regulatory T cells from CD4+CD25- T cells in vitro, and increased the number of regulatory T cells in lymph nodes draining the kidneys in AN. The phenotype of IL-10/TGF-beta Mu2 did not switch to that of effector macrophages in the inflamed kidney, and these cells did not promote fibrosis. Taken together, these data demonstrate that IL-10/TGF-beta-modified macrophages effectively protect against renal injury in AN and may become part of a therapeutic strategy for chronic inflammatory disease.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008
Stephen I. Alexander; Neil Smith; Min Hu; Deborah Verran; Albert Shun; Stuart Dorney; Arabella Smith; Boyd Webster; Peter J. Shaw; Ahti Lammi; Michael Stormon
Complete hematopoietic chimerism and tolerance of a liver allograft from a deceased male donor developed in a 9-year-old girl, with no evidence of graft-versus-host disease 17 months after transplantation. The tolerance was preceded by a period of severe hemolysis, reflecting partial chimerism that was refractory to standard therapies. The hemolysis resolved after the gradual withdrawal of all immunosuppressive therapy.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2006
Deepika Mahajan; Yiping Wang; Xiahong Qin; Ying Wang; Guoping Zheng; Yuan Min Wang; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris
Studies of mechanisms of disease regulation by CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg) have been focused on their interaction with effector T cells; however, the possibility that regulation might involve noncognate cells has not been explored in detail. This study investigated the effect of CD4+CD25+ Treg on macrophage proinflammatory properties and phenotype in vitro and found that they modulate macrophages by inhibiting their activation, leading to reduced proinflammatory cytokine production and a downregulated effector phenotype. For testing the in vivo significance of this effect, CD4+CD25+ T cells that expressed high levels of Foxp3 were reconstituted into SCID mice after induction of Adriamycin nephropathy, a noncognate model of chronic renal disease. CD4+CD25+ T cells significantly reduced glomerular and interstitial injury. In addition, there was a significant fall in the number of macrophages in both the glomeruli and interstitium of SCID mice that were reconstituted with Treg as compared with the Adriamycin alone group. Blockade of TGF-beta using neutralizing antibodies significantly impaired the protective effect of Treg. These findings delineate a TGF-beta-dependent Treg-macrophage inhibitory interaction that can explain cognate-independent protection by Treg.
Transplantation | 2003
Thomas R. Spitzer; Steven L. McAfee; Bimalangshu R. Dey; Christine Colby; J Hope; Howard Grossberg; Frederic I. Preffer; Juanita Shaffer; Stephen I. Alexander; David H. Sachs; Megan Sykes
We initiated a clinical trial of nonmyeloablative haploidentical stem-cell transplantation (SCT) using MEDI-507, an immunoglobulin-G1 monoclonal anti-CD2 antibody. The trial was based on a preclinical major histocompatibility complex-mismatched bone marrow transplant model in which graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was prevented and mixed chimerism as a platform for adoptive cellular immunotherapy was reliably induced. Twelve patients (three cohorts of four patients each) received cyclophosphamide, MEDI-507, and haploidentical unmanipulated bone marrow (n=8) or ex vivo T-cell-depleted peripheral blood stem cells (n=4) for chemorefractory hematologic malignancy. A two-dose regimen and schedule modifications of MEDI-507 were undertaken because of graft loss in the first cohort of four patients and GVHD in the second cohort. With ex vivo T-cell-depleted peripheral blood SCT, mixed chimerism occurred in all four patients without GVHD. Two patients, however, subsequently lost their grafts. Nonmyeloablative preparative therapy with MEDI-507 and haploidentical SCT have led to the reliable induction of at least transient mixed chimerism as a potential platform for adoptive cellular immunotherapy.
Journal of Immunology | 2008
Marian A. Fernandez; Franz K. Puttur; Y. M. Wang; Wade Howden; Stephen I. Alexander; Cheryl A. Jones
The first weeks of life are characterized by immune tolerance and increased susceptibility to intracellular pathogens. The neonatal adaptive response to HSV is attenuated compared with adult control models in humans and mice. T Regulatory cells (Tregs) control autoimmunity and excessive immune responses to infection. We therefore compared Treg responses in the draining lymph nodes (LN) of HSV-infected neonatal and adult C57BL/6 mice with the effect of Treg depletion/inactivation by anti-CD25 (PC61) treatment before infection on Ag-specific T cell effector responses at this site. There was a small, but significant increase in the frequency of CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs at day 3 postinfection (p.i.) in the LN of neonatal and adult mice, compared with age-matched mock-infected controls. Depletion of Tregs before HSV infection significantly enhanced HSV-specific CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity in vivo, cell number, activation, and granzyme B expression 4 days p.i. only in neonatal mice, and significantly enhanced CD8+ and CD4+ T cell IFN-γ responses in both infected adults and neonates. Treg depletion also reduced the titer of infectious virus in the draining LN and nervous system of infected neonates on days 2 and 3 p.i. Treg suppression of the neonatal CTL response p.i. with HSV was associated with increased expression of TGF-β in the draining LN at day 4 p.i. compared with uninfected neonates, but IL-10 was increased in infected adults alone. These experiments support the notion that the newborn primary T cell effector responses to HSV are suppressed by Tregs.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2006
Yuan Min Wang; Geoff Yu Zhang; Yiping Wang; Min Hu; Huiling Wu; Debbie Watson; Shohei Hori; Ian E. Alexander; David C.H. Harris; Stephen I. Alexander
Chronic proteinuric renal injury is a major cause of ESRD. Adriamycin nephropathy is a murine model of chronic proteinuric renal disease whereby chemical injury is followed by immune and structural changes that mimic human disease. Foxp3 is a gene that induces a regulatory T cell (Treg) phenotype. It was hypothesized that Foxp3-transduced Treg could protect against renal injury in Adriamycin nephropathy. CD4+ T cells were transduced with either a Foxp3-containing retrovirus or a control retrovirus. Foxp3-transduced T cells had a regulatory phenotype by functional and phenotypic assays. Adoptive transfer of Foxp3-transduced T cells protected against renal injury. Urinary protein excretion and serum creatinine were reduced (P<0.05), and there was significantly less glomerulosclerosis, tubular damage, and interstitial infiltrates (P<0.01). It is concluded that Foxp3-transduced Treg cells may have a therapeutic role in protecting against immune injury and disease progression in chronic proteinuric renal disease.