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Dive into the research topics where Steven W. Granger is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven W. Granger.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Constitutive Expression of LIGHT on T Cells Leads to Lymphocyte Activation, Inflammation, and Tissue Destruction

Raziya B. Shaikh; Sybil M. Santee; Steven W. Granger; Kristine Butrovich; Tim Cheung; Mitchell Kronenberg; Hilde Cheroutre; Carl F. Ware

LIGHT, a member of the TNF family of cytokines (homologous to lymphotoxin, exhibits inducible expression and competes with HSV glycoprotein D for herpesvirus entry mediator, a receptor expressed on T cells), is induced on activated T cells and mediates costimulatory and antitumor activity in vitro. Relatively little information is available on the in vivo effects of LIGHT expression, particularly within the T cell compartment. In this work, we describe transgenic mice that express human LIGHT under the control of the CD2 promoter, resulting in constitutive transgene expression in cells of the T lymphocyte lineage. LIGHT-transgenic animals exhibit abnormalities in both lymphoid tissue architecture and the distribution of lymphocyte subsets. They also show signs of inflammation that are most severe in the intestine, along with tissue destruction of the reproductive organs. These LIGHT-mediated effects were recapitulated when immune-deficient mice were reconstituted with bone marrow from LIGHT-transgenic donor mice. T cells in the LIGHT-transgenic mice have an activated phenotype and mucosal T cells exhibit enhanced Th1 cytokine activity. The results indicate that LIGHT may function as an important regulator of T cell activation, and implicate LIGHT signaling pathways in inflammation focused on mucosal tissues.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Vaccinia Virus Extracellular Enveloped Virion Neutralization In Vitro and Protection In Vivo Depend on Complement

Mohammed Rafii-El-Idrissi Benhnia; Megan McCausland; Juan Moyron; John Laudenslager; Steven W. Granger; Sandra Rickert; Lilia Koriazova; Ralph T. Kubo; Shinichiro Kato; Shane Crotty

ABSTRACT Antibody neutralization is an important component of protective immunity against vaccinia virus (VACV). Two distinct virion forms, mature virion and enveloped virion (MV and EV, respectively), possess separate functions and nonoverlapping immunological properties. In this study we examined the mechanics of EV neutralization, focusing on EV protein B5 (also called B5R). We show that neutralization of EV is predominantly complement dependent. From a panel of high-affinity anti-B5 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), the only potent neutralizer in vitro (90% at 535 ng/ml) was an immunoglobulin G2a (IgG2a), and neutralization was complement mediated. This MAb was the most protective in vivo against lethal intranasal VACV challenge. Further studies demonstrated that in vivo depletion of complement caused a >50% loss of anti-B5 IgG2a protection, directly establishing the importance of complement for protection against the EV form. However, the mechanism of protection is not sterilizing immunity via elimination of the inoculum as the viral inoculum consisted of a purified MV form. The prevention of illness in vivo indicated rapid control of infection. We further demonstrate that antibody-mediated killing of VACV-infected cells expressing surface B5 is a second protective mechanism provided by complement-fixing anti-B5 IgG. Cell killing was very efficient, and this effector function was highly isotype specific. These results indicate that anti-B5 antibody-directed cell lysis via complement is a powerful mechanism for clearance of infected cells, keeping poxvirus-infected cells from being invisible to humoral immune responses. These findings highlight the importance of multiple mechanisms of antibody-mediated protection against VACV and point to key immunobiological differences between MVs and EVs that impact the outcome of infection.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

A Lymphotoxin-IFN-β Axis Essential for Lymphocyte Survival Revealed during Cytomegalovirus Infection

Theresa A. Banks; Sandra Rickert; Chris A. Benedict; Lisa Ma; Mira Ko; Joshua Meier; Won Ha; Kirsten Schneider; Steven W. Granger; Olga Turovskaya; Dirk Elewaut; Dennis C. Otero; Anthony R. French; Stanley C. Henry; John D. Hamilton; Stefanie Scheu; Klaus Pfeffer; Carl F. Ware

The importance of lymphotoxin (LT) βR (LTβR) as a regulator of lymphoid organogenesis is well established, but its role in host defense has yet to be fully defined. In this study, we report that mice deficient in LTβR signaling were highly susceptible to infection with murine CMV (MCMV) and early during infection exhibited a catastrophic loss of T and B lymphocytes, although the majority of lymphocytes were themselves not directly infected. Moreover, bone marrow chimeras revealed that lymphocyte survival required LTα expression by hemopoietic cells, independent of developmental defects in lymphoid tissue, whereas LTβR expression by both stromal and hemopoietic cells was needed to prevent apoptosis. The induction of IFN-β was also severely impaired in MCMV-infected LTα−/− mice, but immunotherapy with an agonist LTβR Ab restored IFN-β levels, prevented lymphocyte death, and enhanced the survival of these mice. IFN-αβR−/− mice were also found to exhibit profound lymphocyte death during MCMV infection, thus providing a potential mechanistic link between type 1 IFN induction and lymphocyte survival through a LTαβ-dependent pathway important for MCMV host defense.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Heavily Isotype-Dependent Protective Activities of Human Antibodies against Vaccinia Virus Extracellular Virion Antigen B5

Mohammed Rafii-El-Idrissi Benhnia; Megan McCausland; John Laudenslager; Steven W. Granger; Sandra Rickert; Lilia Koriazova; Tomoyuki Tahara; Ralph T. Kubo; Shin-ichiro Kato; Shane Crotty

ABSTRACT Antibodies against the extracellular virion (EV or EEV) form of vaccinia virus are an important component of protective immunity in animal models and likely contribute to the protection of immunized humans against poxviruses. Using fully human monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), we now have shown that the protective attributes of the human anti-B5 antibody response to the smallpox vaccine (vaccinia virus) are heavily dependent on effector functions. By switching Fc domains of a single MAb, we have definitively shown that neutralization in vitro—and protection in vivo in a mouse model—by the human anti-B5 immunoglobulin G MAbs is isotype dependent, thereby demonstrating that efficient protection by these antibodies is not simply dependent on binding an appropriate vaccinia virion antigen with high affinity but in fact requires antibody effector function. The complement components C3 and C1q, but not C5, were required for neutralization. We also have demonstrated that human MAbs against B5 can potently direct complement-dependent cytotoxicity of vaccinia virus-infected cells. Each of these results was then extended to the polyclonal human antibody response to the smallpox vaccine. A model is proposed to explain the mechanism of EV neutralization. Altogether these findings enhance our understanding of the central protective activities of smallpox vaccine-elicited antibodies in immunized humans.


Antiviral Therapy | 2010

Combination therapy of vaccinia virus infection with human anti-H3 and anti-B5 monoclonal antibodies in a small animal model

Megan McCausland; Mohammed Rafii-El-Idrissi Benhnia; Lindsay Crickard; John Laudenslager; Steven W. Granger; Tomoyuki Tahara; Ralph T. Kubo; Lilia Koriazova; Shin-ichiro Kato; Shane Crotty

BACKGROUNDnTreatment of rare severe side effects of vaccinia virus (VACV) immunization in humans is currently very challenging. VACV possesses two immunologically distinct virion forms in vivo - intracellular mature virion (MV, IMV) and extracellular virion (EV, EEV).nnnMETHODSnAntibody-mediated therapeutic efficacy was determined against VACV infection in a small animal model of progressive vaccinia. The model consisted of severe combined immunodeficiency mice infected with VACV New York City Board of Health vaccine strain and treated with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs).nnnRESULTSnHere, we show that combination therapy with two fully human mAbs against an immunodominant MV antigen, H3 (H3L), and an EV antigen, B5 (B5R), provides significantly better protection against disease and death than either single human monoclonal or human vaccinia immune globulin, the currently licensed therapeutic for side effects of smallpox vaccination.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe preclinical studies validate that this combination of mAbs against H3 and B5 is a promising approach as a poxvirus infection treatment for use in humans.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Polymorphic Variants of LIGHT (TNF Superfamily-14) Alter Receptor Avidity and Bioavailability

Timothy C. Cheung; Ken Coppieters; Hideki Sanjo; Lisa M. Oborne; Paula S. Norris; Amy Coddington; Steven W. Granger; Dirk Elewaut; Carl F. Ware

The TNF superfamily member homologous to lymphotoxins, exhibits inducible expression, and competes with HSV glycoprotein D for herpesvirus entry mediator (HVEM), a receptor expressed by T lymphocytes (LIGHT) [TNF superfamily (SF)-14], is a key cytokine that activates T cells and dendritic cells and is implicated as a mediator of inflammatory, metabolic, and malignant diseases. LIGHT engages the lymphotoxin-β receptor (LTβR) and HVEM (TNFRSF14), but is competitively limited in activating these receptors by soluble decoy receptor-3 (DcR3; TNFRSF6B). Two variants in the human LIGHT alter the protein at E214K (rs344560) in the receptor-binding domain and S32L (rs2291667) in the cytosolic domain; however, the functional impact of these polymorphisms is unknown. A neutralizing Ab failed to bind the LIGHT-214K variant, indicating this position as a part of the receptor-binding region. Relative to the predominant reference variant S32/E214, the other variants showed altered avidity with LTβR and less with HVEM. Heterotrimers of the LIGHT variants decreased binding avidity to DcR3 and minimized the inhibitory effect of DcR3 toward LTβR-induced activation of NF-κB. In patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, DcR3 protein levels were significantly elevated. Immunohistochemistry revealed synoviocytes as a significant source of DcR3 production, and DcR3 hyperexpression is controlled by posttranscriptional mechanisms. The increased potential for LTβR signaling, coupled with increased bioavailability due to lower DcR3 avidity, provides a mechanism of how polymorphic variants in LIGHT could contribute to the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases.


Journal of Virology | 1998

In Vivo Footprinting of the Enhancer Sequences in the Upstream Long Terminal Repeat of Moloney Murine Leukemia Virus: Differential Binding of Nuclear Factors in Different Cell Types

Steven W. Granger; Hung Fan


Archive | 2007

Antagonistic human light-specific human monoclonal antibodies

Steven W. Granger; Shinichiro Kato; Carl F. Ware


Journal of Virology | 1999

Tandemization of a Subregion of the Enhancer Sequences from SRS 19-6 Murine Leukemia Virus Associated with T-Lymphoid but Not Other Leukemias

Steven W. Granger; Linda M. Bundy; Hung Fan


Archive | 2007

Antagonistic hLIGHT-specific human monoclonal antibodies

Steven W. Granger; Shinichiro Kato; Carl F. Ware

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Shinichiro Kato

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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John Laudenslager

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Lilia Koriazova

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Mohammed Rafii-El-Idrissi Benhnia

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Ralph T. Kubo

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Sandra Rickert

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Shane Crotty

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Dirk Elewaut

Ghent University Hospital

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Hung Fan

University of California

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