Tania Habib
Benaroya Research Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tania Habib.
Journal of Immunology | 2009
Adrian F. Arechiga; Tania Habib; Yantao He; Xian Zhang; Zhong Yin Zhang; Andrew Funk; Jane H. Buckner
PTPN22 is a gene encoding the protein tyrosine phosphatase Lyp. A missense mutation changing residue 1858 from cytosine to thymidine (1858C/T) is associated with multiple autoimmune disorders. Studies have demonstrated that Lyp has an inhibitory effect on TCR signaling; however, the presence of autoantibodies in all of the diseases associated with the 1858T variant and recent evidence that Ca2+ flux is altered in B cells of 1858T carriers indicate a role for Lyp in B cell signaling. In this study we show that B cell signal transduction is impaired in individuals who express the variant. This defect in signaling is characterized by a deficit in proliferation, a decrease in phosphorylation of key signaling proteins, and is reversed by inhibition of Lyp. These findings suggest that the PTPN22 1858T variant alters BCR signaling and implicate B cells in the mechanism by which the PTPN22 1858T variant contributes to autoimmunity.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013
Xuezhi Dai; Richard G. James; Tania Habib; Swati Singh; Shaun W. Jackson; Socheath Khim; Randall T. Moon; Denny Liggitt; Alejandro Wolf-Yadlin; Jane H. Buckner; David J. Rawlings
Multiple autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, Graves disease, and systemic lupus erythematosus, are associated with an allelic variant of protein tyrosine phosphatase nonreceptor 22 (PTPN22), which encodes the protein LYP. To model the human disease-linked variant LYP-R620W, we generated knockin mice expressing the analogous mutation, R619W, in the murine ortholog PEST domain phosphatase (PEP). In contrast with a previous report, we found that this variant exhibits normal protein stability, but significantly alters lymphocyte function. Aged knockin mice exhibited effector T cell expansion and transitional, germinal center, and age-related B cell expansion as well as the development of autoantibodies and systemic autoimmunity. Further, PEP-R619W affected B cell selection and B lineage-restricted variant expression and was sufficient to promote autoimmunity. Consistent with these features, PEP-R619W lymphocytes were hyperresponsive to antigen-receptor engagement with a distinct profile of tyrosine-phosphorylated substrates. Thus, PEP-R619W uniquely modulates T and B cell homeostasis, leading to a loss in tolerance and autoimmunity.
Journal of Immunology | 2012
Tania Habib; Andrew Funk; Mary Rieck; Archana Brahmandam; Xuezhi Dai; Anil K. Panigrahi; Eline T. Luning Prak; Almut Meyer-Bahlburg; Srinath Sanda; Carla J. Greenbaum; David J. Rawlings; Jane H. Buckner
The PTPN22 genetic variant 1858T, encoding Lyp620W, is associated with multiple autoimmune disorders for which the production of autoantibodies is a common feature, suggesting a loss of B cell tolerance. Lyp620W results in blunted BCR signaling in memory B cells. Because BCR signal strength is tightly coupled to central and peripheral tolerance, we examined whether Lyp620W impacts peripheral B cell homeostasis in healthy individuals heterozygous for the PTPN221858T variant. We found that these subjects display alterations in the composition of the B cell pool that include specific expansion of the transitional and anergic IgD+IgM−CD27− B cell subsets. The PTPN22 1858T variant was further associated with significantly diminished BCR signaling and a resistance to apoptosis in both transitional and naive B cells. Strikingly, parallel changes in both BCR signaling and composition of B cell compartment were observed in type 1 diabetic subjects, irrespective of PTPN22 genotype, revealing a novel immune phenotype and likely shared mechanisms leading to a loss of B cell tolerance. Our combined findings suggest that Lyp620W-mediated effects, due in part to the altered BCR signaling threshold, contribute to breakdown of peripheral tolerance and the entry of autoreactive B cells into the naive B cell compartment.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2008
Heon Park; Karen Staehling-Hampton; Mark Appleby; Mary E. Brunkow; Tania Habib; Yi Zhang; Fred Ramsdell; H. Denny Liggitt; Brian Freie; Mark Tsang; George Carlson; Sherree L. Friend; Charles W. Frevert; Brian M. Iritani
Hem1 (Hematopoietic protein 1) is a hematopoietic cell-specific member of the Hem family of cytoplasmic adaptor proteins. Orthologues of Hem1 in Dictyostelium discoideum, Drosophila melanogaster, and Caenorhabditis elegans are essential for cytoskeletal reorganization, embryonic cell migration, and morphogenesis. However, the in vivo functions of mammalian Hem1 are not known. Using a chemical mutagenesis strategy in mice to identify novel genes involved in immune cell functions, we positionally cloned a nonsense mutation in the Hem1 gene. Hem1 deficiency results in defective F-actin polymerization and actin capping in lymphocytes and neutrophils caused by loss of the Rac-controlled actin-regulatory WAVE protein complex. T cell development is disrupted in Hem1-deficient mice at the CD4−CD8− (double negative) to CD4+CD8+ (double positive) cell stages, whereas T cell activation and adhesion are impaired. Hem1-deficient neutrophils fail to migrate in response to chemotactic agents and are deficient in their ability to phagocytose bacteria. Remarkably, some Rac-dependent functions, such as Th1 differentiation and nuclear factor κB (NF-κB)–dependent transcription of proinflammatory cytokines proceed normally in Hem1-deficient mice, whereas the production of Th17 cells are enhanced. These results demonstrate that Hem1 is essential for hematopoietic cell development, function, and homeostasis by controlling a distinct pathway leading to cytoskeletal reorganization, whereas NF-κB–dependent transcription proceeds independently of Hem1 and F-actin polymerization.
Diabetes | 2016
Yan Ge; Suna Onengut-Gumuscu; Aaron R. Quinlan; Aaron J. Mackey; Jocyndra A. Wright; Jane H. Buckner; Tania Habib; Stephen S. Rich; Patrick Concannon
Despite finding more than 40 risk loci for type 1 diabetes (T1D), the causative variants and genes remain largely unknown. Here, we sought to identify rare deleterious variants of moderate-to-large effects contributing to T1D. We deeply sequenced 301 protein-coding genes located in 49 previously reported T1D risk loci in 70 T1D cases of European ancestry. These cases were selected from putatively high-risk families that had three or more siblings diagnosed with T1D at early ages. A cluster of rare deleterious variants in PTPN22 was identified, including two novel frameshift mutations (ss538819444 and rs371865329) and two missense variants (rs74163663 and rs56048322). Genotyping in 3,609 T1D families showed that rs56048322 was significantly associated with T1D and that this association was independent of the T1D-associated common variant rs2476601. The risk allele at rs56048322 affects splicing of PTPN22, resulting in the production of two alternative PTPN22 transcripts and a novel isoform of LYP (the protein encoded by PTPN22). This isoform competes with the wild-type LYP for binding to CSK and results in hyporesponsiveness of CD4+ T cells to antigen stimulation in T1D subjects. These findings demonstrate that in addition to common variants, rare deleterious variants in PTPN22 exist and can affect T1D risk.
Clinical Immunology | 2016
Elizabeth M. Dam; Tania Habib; Janice Chen; Andrew Funk; Veronika A. Glukhova; Mel Davis-Pickett; Shan Wei; Richard G. James; Jane H. Buckner; Karen Cerosaletti
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by the development of autoantibodies that drive disease pathogenesis. Genetic studies have associated nonsynonymous variants in the BANK1 B cell scaffolding gene with susceptibility to SLE and autoantibodies in lupus. To determine how the BANK1 SLE-risk variants contribute to the dysregulated B cell program in lupus, we performed genotype/phenotype studies in human B cells. Targeted phospho-proteomics were used to evaluate BCR/CD40 signaling in human B cell lines engineered to express the BANK1 risk or non-risk variant proteins. We found that phosphorylation of proximal BCR signaling molecules was reduced in B cells expressing the BANK1 risk protein compared to the non-risk protein. Similar to these findings, we observed decreased B cell signaling in primary B cells from genotyped healthy control subjects carrying the BANK1 risk haplotype, including blunted BCR- and CD40-dependent AKT activation. Consistent with decreased AKT activation, we found that BANK1 risk B cells expressed increased basal levels of FOXO1 protein and increased expression of FOXO1 target genes upon stimulation compared to non-risk B cells. Healthy subjects carrying the BANK1 risk haplotype were also characterized by an expansion of memory B cells. Taken together, our results suggest that the SLE susceptibility variants in the BANK1 gene may contribute to lupus by altering B cell signaling, increasing FOXO1 levels, and enhancing memory B cell development.
Journal of Immunology | 2017
Genita Metzler; Xuezhi Dai; Christopher D. Thouvenel; Socheath Khim; Tania Habib; Jane H. Buckner; David J. Rawlings
A common genetic variant in the gene encoding the protein tyrosine phosphatase nonreceptor type 22 (PTPN22 C1858T) has been linked to a wide range of autoimmune disorders. Although a B cell–intrinsic role in promoting disease has been reported, the mechanism(s) through which this variant functions to alter the preimmune B cell repertoire remains unknown. Using a series of polyclonal and transgenic self-reactive models harboring the analogous mutation in murine Ptpn22, we show evidence for enhanced BCR, B cell–activating factor receptor, and CD40 coreceptor programs, leading to broadly enhanced positive selection of B cells at two discrete checkpoints in the bone marrow and spleen. We further identified a bias for selection of B cells into the follicular mature versus marginal zone B cell compartment. Using a biomarker to track a self-reactive H chain in peripheral blood, we found evidence of similarly enhanced positive selection in human carriers of the PTPN22 C1858T variant. Our combined data support a model whereby the risk variant augments the BCR and coreceptor programs throughout B cell development, promoting enrichment of self-reactive specificities into the follicular mature compartment and thereby likely increasing the risk for seeding of autoimmune B cell responses.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007
Tania Habib; Heon Park; Mark Tsang; Ignacio Moreno de Alborán; Andrea Nicks; Leslie Wilson; Paul S. Knoepfler; Sarah F. Andrews; David J. Rawlings; Robert N. Eisenman; Brian M. Iritani
Habib et al. 2007. J. Cell Biol. doi:10.1083/jcb.200704173 [OpenUrl][1][Abstract/FREE Full Text][2] [1]: {openurl}?query=rft_id%253Dinfo%253Adoi%252F10.1083%252Fjcb.200704173%26rft_id%253Dinfo%253Apmid%252F17998397%26rft.genre%253Darticle%26rft_val_fmt%253Dinfo%253Aofi%252Ffmt%253Akev%253Amtx%
Biochemistry | 2002
Tania Habib; Shantha Senadheera; Kenneth Weinberg
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Yoshitaka Miyakawa; Ponlapat Rojnuckarin; Tania Habib