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Dive into the research topics where Stephen J. McSorley is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen J. McSorley.


Immunity | 2003

Distinct Dendritic Cell Populations Sequentially Present Antigen to CD4 T Cells and Stimulate Different Aspects of Cell-Mediated Immunity

Andrea Itano; Stephen J. McSorley; R. Lee Reinhardt; Benjamin D. Ehst; Elizabeth Ingulli; Alexander Y. Rudensky; Marc K. Jenkins

Peptide:MHC II complexes derived from a fluorescent antigen were detected in vivo to identify the cells that present subcutaneously injected antigen to CD4 T cells. Skin-derived dendritic cells (DCs) that acquired the antigen while in the draining lymph nodes were the first cells to display peptide:MHC II complexes. Presentation by these cells induced CD69, IL-2 production, and maximal proliferation by the T cells. Later, DCs displaying peptide:MHC II complexes migrated from the injection site via a G protein-dependent mechanism. Presentation by these migrants sustained expression of the IL-2 receptor and promoted delayed type hypersensitivity. Therefore, presentation of peptide:MHC II complexes derived from a subcutaneous antigen occurs in two temporally distinct waves with different functional consequences.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Characterization of CD4+ T Cell Responses During Natural Infection with Salmonella typhimurium

Stephen J. McSorley; Brad T. Cookson; Marc K. Jenkins

CD4+ T cells are important for resistance to infection with Salmonella typhimurium. However, the Ag specificity of this T cell response is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that a significant fraction of Salmonella-specific CD4+ T cells respond to the flagellar filament protein, FliC, and that this Ag has the capacity to protect naive mice from lethal Salmonella infection. To characterize this Ag-specific response further, we generated FliC-specific CD4+ T cell clones from mice that had resolved infection with an attenuated strain of Salmonella. These clones were found to respond to an epitope from a constant region of FliC, enabling them to cross-react with flagellar proteins expressed by a number of distinct Salmonella serovars.


Immunity | 2002

Tracking Salmonella-Specific CD4 T Cells In Vivo Reveals a Local Mucosal Response to a Disseminated Infection

Stephen J. McSorley; Sarah Asch; Massimo Costalonga; R. Lee Reinhardt; Marc K. Jenkins

A novel adoptive transfer system was used to track the fate of naive Salmonella-specific CD4 T cells in vivo. These cells showed signs of activation in the Peyers patches as early as 3 hr after oral infection. The activated CD4 T cells then produced IL-2 and proliferated in the T cell areas of these tissues before migrating into the B cell-rich follicles. In contrast, Salmonella-specific CD4 T cells were not activated in the spleen and very few of these cells migrated to the liver, despite the presence of bacteria in both organs. These results show that the T cell response to pathogenic Salmonella infection is localized to the gut-associated lymphoid tissue and does not extend efficiently to the major sites of late infection.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Antibody is required for protection against virulent but not attenuated Salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium.

Stephen J. McSorley; Marc K. Jenkins

ABSTRACT Resolution of infection with attenuated Salmonella is an active process that requires CD4+ T cells. Here, we demonstrate that costimulation via the surface molecule CD28, but not antibody production by B cells, is required for clearance of attenuatedaroA Salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium. In contrast, specific antibody is critical for vaccine-induced protection against virulent bacteria. Therefore, CD28+CD4+ T cells are sufficient for clearance of avirulentSalmonella in naive hosts, whereas CD4+ T cells and specific antibodies are required for protection from virulentSalmonella in immune hosts.


Nature | 2016

NOD1 and NOD2 signalling links ER stress with inflammation

A. Marijke Keestra-Gounder; Mariana X. Byndloss; Núbia Seyffert; Briana M. Young; Alfredo Chávez-Arroyo; April Y. Tsai; Stephanie A. Cevallos; Maria G. Winter; Oanh H. Pham; Connor R. Tiffany; Maarten F. de Jong; Tobias Kerrinnes; Resmi Ravindran; Paul A. Luciw; Stephen J. McSorley; Andreas J. Bäumler; Renée M. Tsolis

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is a major contributor to inflammatory diseases, such as Crohn disease and type 2 diabetes. ER stress induces the unfolded protein response, which involves activation of three transmembrane receptors, ATF6, PERK and IRE1α. Once activated, IRE1α recruits TRAF2 to the ER membrane to initiate inflammatory responses via the NF-κB pathway. Inflammation is commonly triggered when pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), such as Toll-like receptors or nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptors, detect tissue damage or microbial infection. However, it is not clear which PRRs have a major role in inducing inflammation during ER stress. Here we show that NOD1 and NOD2, two members of the NOD-like receptor family of PRRs, are important mediators of ER-stress-induced inflammation in mouse and human cells. The ER stress inducers thapsigargin and dithiothreitol trigger production of the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6 in a NOD1/2-dependent fashion. Inflammation and IL-6 production triggered by infection with Brucella abortus, which induces ER stress by injecting the type IV secretion system effector protein VceC into host cells, is TRAF2, NOD1/2 and RIP2-dependent and can be reduced by treatment with the ER stress inhibitor tauroursodeoxycholate or an IRE1α kinase inhibitor. The association of NOD1 and NOD2 with pro-inflammatory responses induced by the IRE1α/TRAF2 signalling pathway provides a novel link between innate immunity and ER-stress-induced inflammation.


Nature Immunology | 2012

The Ets transcription factor Spi-B is essential for the differentiation of intestinal microfold cells

Takashi Kanaya; Koji Hase; Daisuke Takahashi; Shinji Fukuda; Katsuaki Hoshino; Izumi Sasaki; Hiroaki Hemmi; Kathryn Knoop; Nachiket Kumar; Mayuko Sato; Tatsuro Katsuno; Osamu Yokosuka; Kiminori Toyooka; Kumiko Nakai; Ayako Sakamoto; Yuuki Kitahara; Toshi Jinnohara; Stephen J. McSorley; Tsuneyasu Kaisho; Ifor R. Williams; Hiroshi Ohno

Intestinal microfold cells (M cells) are an enigmatic lineage of intestinal epithelial cells that initiate mucosal immune responses through the uptake and transcytosis of luminal antigens. The mechanisms of M-cell differentiation are poorly understood, as the rarity of these cells has hampered analysis. Exogenous administration of the cytokine RANKL can synchronously activate M-cell differentiation in mice. Here we show the Ets transcription factor Spi-B was induced early during M-cell differentiation. Absence of Spi-B silenced the expression of various M-cell markers and prevented the differentiation of M cells in mice. The activation of T cells via an oral route was substantially impaired in the intestine of Spi-B-deficient (Spib−/−) mice. Our study demonstrates that commitment to the intestinal M-cell lineage requires Spi-B as a candidate master regulator.


Mucosal Immunology | 2011

Development of protective immunity to Salmonella, a mucosal pathogen with a systemic agenda

Amanda Griffin; Stephen J. McSorley

Salmonella infections can cause a range of intestinal and systemic diseases in human and animal hosts. Although some Salmonella serovars initiate a localized intestinal inflammatory response, others use the intestine as a portal of entry to initiate a systemic infection. Considerable progress has been made in understanding bacterial invasion and dissemination strategies, as well as the nature of the Salmonella-specific immune response to oral infection. Innate and adaptive immunity are rapidly initiated after oral infection, but these effector responses can also be hindered by bacterial evasion strategies. Furthermore, although Salmonella resides within intramacrophage phagosomes, recent studies have highlighted a surprising collaboration of CD4 Th1, Th17, and B-cell responses in mediating resistance to Salmonella infection.


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

Identification of a common immune signature in murine and human systemic Salmonellosis

Seung Joo Lee; Li Liang; Silvia Juarez; Minelva R. Nanton; Esther N. Gondwe; Chisomo L. Msefula; Matthew A. Kayala; Francesca Necchi; Jennifer N. Heath; Peter J. Hart; Renée M. Tsolis; Robert S. Heyderman; Calman A. MacLennan; Philip L. Felgner; D. Huw Davies; Stephen J. McSorley

Despite the importance of Salmonella infections in human and animal health, the target antigens of Salmonella-specific immunity remain poorly defined. We have previously shown evidence for antibody-mediating protection against invasive Salmonellosis in mice and African children. To generate an overview of antibody targeting in systemic Salmonellosis, a Salmonella proteomic array containing over 2,700 proteins was constructed and probed with immune sera from Salmonella-infected mice and humans. Analysis of multiple inbred mouse strains identified 117 antigens recognized by systemic antibody responses in murine Salmonellosis. Importantly, many of these antigens were independently identified as target antigens using sera from Malawian children with Salmonella bacteremia, validating the study of the murine model. Furthermore, vaccination with SseB, the most prominent antigenic target in Malawian children, provided mice with significant protection against Salmonella infection. Together, these data uncover an overlapping immune signature of disseminated Salmonellosis in mice and humans and provide a foundation for the generation of a protective subunit vaccine.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

TLR5-Deficient Mice Lack Basal Inflammatory and Metabolic Defects but Exhibit Impaired CD4 T Cell Responses to a Flagellated Pathogen

Shirdi Letran; Seung Joo Lee; Shaikh M. Atif; Adriana Flores-Langarica; Satoshi Uematsu; Shizuo Akira; Adam F. Cunningham; Stephen J. McSorley

TLR5-deficient mice have been reported to develop spontaneous intestinal inflammation and metabolic abnormalities. However, we report that TLR5-deficient mice from two different animal colonies display no evidence of basal inflammatory disease, metabolic abnormalities, or enhanced resistance to Salmonella infection. In contrast, the absence of TLR5 hindered the initial activation and clonal expansion of intestinal flagellin-specific CD4 T cells following oral Salmonella infection. Together, these data demonstrate that a basal inflammatory phenotype is not a consistent feature of TLR5-deficient mice and document a novel role for TLR5 in the rapid targeting of flagellin by intestinal pathogen-specific CD4 T cells.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Temporal Expression of Bacterial Proteins Instructs Host CD4 T Cell Expansion and Th17 Development

Seung Joo Lee; James B. McLachlan; Jonathan R. Kurtz; Danhua Fan; Sebastian E. Winter; Andreas J. Bäumler; Marc K. Jenkins; Stephen J. McSorley

Pathogens can substantially alter gene expression within an infected host depending on metabolic or virulence requirements in different tissues, however, the effect of these alterations on host immunity are unclear. Here we visualized multiple CD4 T cell responses to temporally expressed proteins in Salmonella-infected mice. Flagellin-specific CD4 T cells expanded and contracted early, differentiated into Th1 and Th17 lineages, and were enriched in mucosal tissues after oral infection. In contrast, CD4 T cells responding to Salmonella Type-III Secretion System (TTSS) effectors steadily accumulated until bacterial clearance was achieved, primarily differentiated into Th1 cells, and were predominantly detected in systemic tissues. Thus, pathogen regulation of antigen expression plays a major role in orchestrating the expansion, differentiation, and location of antigen-specific CD4 T cells in vivo.

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Seung Joo Lee

University of California

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Lin Xi Li

University of California

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Oanh H. Pham

University of California

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Shaikh M. Atif

University of California

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