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Dive into the research topics where Subramaniam Krishnan is active.

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Featured researches published by Subramaniam Krishnan.


Critical Care | 2014

Targeting the programmed cell death 1: programmed cell death ligand 1 pathway reverses T cell exhaustion in patients with sepsis

Katherine Chang; Catherine Svabek; Cristina Vazquez-Guillamet; Bryan Sato; David Rasche; Strother Wilson; Paul B. Robbins; Nancy Ulbrandt; JoAnn Suzich; Jonathan M. Green; Andriani C. Patera; Wade Blair; Subramaniam Krishnan; Richard S. Hotchkiss

IntroductionA major pathophysiologic mechanism in sepsis is impaired host immunity which results in failure to eradicate invading pathogens and increased susceptibility to secondary infections. Although many immunosuppressive mechanisms exist, increased expression of the inhibitory receptor programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and its ligand (PD-L1) are thought to play key roles. The newly recognized phenomenon of T cell exhaustion is mediated in part by PD-1 effects on T cells. This study tested the ability of anti-PD-1 and anti-PD-L1 antibodies to prevent apoptosis and improve lymphocyte function in septic patients.MethodsBlood was obtained from 43 septic and 15 non-septic critically-ill patients. Effects of anti-PD-1, anti-PD-L1, or isotype-control antibody on lymphocyte apoptosis and interferon gamma (IFN-γ) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) production were quantitated by flow cytometry.ResultsLymphocytes from septic patients produced decreased IFN-γ and IL-2 and had increased CD8 T cell expression of PD-1 and decreased PD-L1 expression compared to non-septic patients (P<0.05). Monocytes from septic patients had increased PD-L1 and decreased HLA-DR expression compared to non-septic patients (P<0.01). CD8 T cell expression of PD-1 increased over time in ICU as PD-L1, IFN-γ, and IL2 decreased. In addition, donors with the highest CD8 PD-1 expression together with the lowest CD8 PD-L1 expression also had lower levels of HLA-DR expression in monocytes, and an increased rate of secondary infections, suggestive of a more immune exhausted phenotype. Treatment of cells from septic patients with anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-L1 antibody decreased apoptosis and increased IFN-γ and IL-2 production in septic patients; (P<0.01). The percentage of CD4 T cells that were PD-1 positive correlated with the degree of cellular apoptosis (P<0.01).ConclusionsIn vitro blockade of the PD-1:PD-L1 pathway decreases apoptosis and improves immune cell function in septic patients. The current results together with multiple positive studies of anti-PD-1 and anti-PD-L1 in animal models of bacterial and fungal infections and the relative safety profile of anti-PD-1/anti-PD-L1 in human oncology trials to date strongly support the initiation of clinical trials testing these antibodies in sepsis, a disorder with a high mortality.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Analysis of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Preclinical and Clinical Variants Resistant to Neutralization by Monoclonal Antibodies Palivizumab and/or Motavizumab

Qing Zhu; Josie M. McAuliffe; Nita K. Patel; Frances J. Palmer-Hill; Chin-Fen Yang; Brandon Liang; Lan Su; Wei Zhu; Leslie Wachter; Susan Wilson; Randall S. MacGill; Subramaniam Krishnan; Michael P. McCarthy; Genevieve A. Losonsky; JoAnn Suzich

BACKGROUND Palivizumab is a US Food and Drug Administration-approved monoclonal antibody for the prevention of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) lower respiratory disease in high-risk infants. Motavizumab, derived from palivizumab with enhanced antiviral activity, has recently been tested in humans. Although palivizumab escape mutants have been generated in the laboratory, the development of resistant RSV in patients receiving palivizumab has not been reported previously. METHODS We generated palivizumab and motavizumab escape mutants in vitro and examined the development of resistant mutants in RSV-breakthrough patients receiving immunoprophylaxis. The effect of these mutations on neutralization by palivizumab and motavizumab and in vitro fitness was studied. RESULTS Antibody-resistant RSV variants selected in vitro had mutations at position 272 of the fusion protein, from lysine to asparagine, methionine, threonine, glutamine, or glutamate. Variants containing mutations at positions 272 and 275 were detected in breakthrough patients. All these variants were resistant to palivizumab, but only the glutamate variant at position 272 demonstrated resistance to motavizumab. Mixtures of wild-type and variant RSV soon lost the resistant phenotype in the absence of selection. CONCLUSIONS Resistant RSV variants were detected in a small subset (∼ 5%) of RSV breakthrough cases. The fitness of these variants was impaired, compared to wild-type RSV.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2011

Respiratory syncytial virus is associated with an inflammatory response in lungs and architectural remodeling of lung-draining lymph nodes of newborn lambs

Fatoumata B. Sow; Jack M. Gallup; Alicia K. Olivier; Subramaniam Krishnan; Andriani C. Patera; JoAnn Suzich; Mark R. Ackermann

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection in children worldwide. The understanding of neonatal RSV pathogenesis depends on using an animal model that reproduces neonatal RSV disease. Previous studies from us and others demonstrated that the neonatal lamb model resembles human neonatal RSV infection. Here, we provide an extensive and detailed characterization of the histopathology, viral load, cellular infiltration, and cytokine production in lungs and tracheobronchial lymph nodes of lambs inoculated with human RSV strain A2 over the course of infection. In the lung, RSV titers were low at day 3 postinfection, increased significantly by day 6, and decreased to baseline levels at day 14. Infection in the lung was associated with an accumulation of macrophages, CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, and a transcriptional response of genes involved in inflammation, chemotaxis, and interferon response, characterized by increased IFNγ, IL-8, MCP-1, and PD-L1, and decreased IFNβ, IL-10, and TGF-β. Laser capture microdissection studies determined that lung macrophage-enriched populations were the source of MCP-1 but not IL-8. Immunoreactivity to caspase 3 occurred within bronchioles and alveoli of day 6-infected lambs. In lung-draining lymph nodes, RSV induced lymphoid hyperplasia, suggesting an ability of RSV to enhance lymphocytic proliferation and differentiation pathways. This study suggests that, in lambs with moderate clinical disease, RSV enhances the activation of caspase cell death and Th1-skewed inflammatory pathways, and complements previous observations that emphasize the role of inflammation in the pathogenesis of RSV disease.


Respiratory Research | 2011

Respiratory syncytial virus infection is associated with an altered innate immunity and a heightened pro-inflammatory response in the lungs of preterm lambs

Fatoumata B. Sow; Jack M. Gallup; Subramaniam Krishnan; Andriani C. Patera; JoAnn Suzich; Mark R. Ackermann

IntroductionFactors explaining the greater susceptibility of preterm infants to severe lower respiratory infections with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) remain poorly understood. Fetal/newborn lambs are increasingly appreciated as a model to study key elements of RSV infection in newborn infants due to similarities in lung alveolar development, immune response, and susceptibility to RSV. Previously, our laboratory demonstrated that preterm lambs had elevated viral antigen and developed more severe lesions compared to full-term lambs at seven days post-infection. Here, we compared the pathogenesis and immunological response to RSV infection in lungs of preterm and full-term lambs.MethodsLambs were delivered preterm by Caesarian section or full-term by natural birth, then inoculated with bovine RSV (bRSV) via the intratracheal route. Seven days post-infection, lungs were collected for evaluation of cytokine production, histopathology and cellular infiltration.ResultsCompared to full-term lambs, lungs of preterm lambs had a heightened pro-inflammatory response after infection, with significantly increased MCP-1, MIP-1α, IFN-γ, TNF-α and PD-L1 mRNA. RSV infection in the preterm lung was characterized by increased epithelial thickening and periodic acid-Schiff staining, indicative of glycogen retention. Nitric oxide levels were decreased in lungs of infected preterm lambs compared to full-term lambs, indicating alternative macrophage activation. Although infection induced significant neutrophil recruitment into the lungs of preterm lambs, neutrophils produced less myeloperoxidase than those of full-term lambs, suggesting decreased functional activation.ConclusionsTaken together, our data suggest that increased RSV load and inadequate immune response may contribute to the enhanced disease severity observed in the lungs of preterm lambs.


Immunological Investigations | 2012

Ontogeny of the Immune Response in the Ovine Lung

Fatoumata B. Sow; Jack M. Gallup; Rachel J. Derscheid; Subramaniam Krishnan; Mark R. Ackermann

Perinatal lambs are increasingly appreciated as a model to study respiratory infections of premature and newborn human infants. To explore the relationship between developmental age and immunological competence in the respiratory tract, the basal levels of expression of genes involved in innate and adaptive immune functions in the lung were examined in pre-term lambs (115 days and 130 days), at birth (145 days) and post-partum (15 days and 3 years old). Our results show that innate immune genes (TLRs-3, -4, -7, -8; SP-A, SP-D, and SBD1) were differentially expressed through development; cytokines (IFN-γ, IL-6, TNF-α) and chemokines (IL-8, MCP-1) were low during gestation and post-partum but maximal at birth; genes involved in adaptive immunity (PD-1, PD-L1, TGF-β) were present in pre-term and newborn lung, but were lower in adult lung. The results suggest that pre-term and neonatal lambs may be able to mount an immune response following infection, but that the response may not be optimal. Our studies provide an important set of comparative data on the ontogeny of lung immunity in sheep and set a framework for studies on age-dependent susceptibility to respiratory pathogens.


Journal of General Virology | 2013

RAGE inhibits human respiratory syncytial virus syncytium formation by interfering with F-protein function

Jane Tian; Kelly Huang; Subramaniam Krishnan; Catherine Svabek; Daniel C. Rowe; Yambasu A. Brewah; Miguel A. Sanjuan; Andriani C. Patera; Roland Kolbeck; Ronald Herbst; Gary P. Sims

Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of severe lower respiratory tract infection. Infection is critically dependent on the RSV fusion (F) protein, which mediates fusion between the viral envelope and airway epithelial cells. The F protein is also expressed on infected cells and is responsible for fusion of infected cells with adjacent cells, resulting in the formation of multinucleate syncytia. The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is a pattern-recognition receptor that is constitutively highly expressed by type I alveolar epithelial cells. Here, we report that RAGE protected HEK cells from RSV-induced cell death and reduced viral titres in vitro. RAGE appeared to interact directly with the F protein, but, rather than inhibiting RSV entry into host cells, virus replication and budding, membrane-expressed RAGE or soluble RAGE blocked F-protein-mediated syncytium formation and sloughing. These data indicate that RAGE may contribute to protecting the lower airways from RSV by inhibiting the formation of syncytia, viral spread, epithelial damage and airway obstruction.


Archive | 2008

Methods of treating rsv infections and related conditions

Subramaniam Krishnan; JoAnn Suzich; Peter A. Kiener; Genevieve Losonksy; Herren Wu; William Dall'acqua; Bettina Richter


Archive | 2014

Compositions and methods for treating sepsis

Subramaniam Krishnan; Wade Blair; Andriani C. Patera


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Characterization Of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infection In Primary Human Airway Epithelial Cells In Air-liquid Interface Systems

Subramaniam Krishnan; Catherine Svabek; Sorin Damian; Kelly Huang; Arnita S. Barnes; Meggan Czapiga; Nadezhda Frolova; Saima Siddiqui; Martin Brown; Marjorie Smithhisler; JoAnn Suzich; Andriani C. Patera


Archive | 2016

lambsof lung-draining lymph nodes of newborn inflammatory response in lungs and architectural Respiratory syncytial virus is associated with an

JoAnn Suzich; Mark R. Ackermann; Fatoumata B. Sow; Jack M. Gallup; Alicia K. Olivier; Subramaniam Krishnan

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Alicia K. Olivier

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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