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Dive into the research topics where Ted H. Hansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Ted H. Hansen.


Nature | 2005

Licensing of natural killer cells by host major histocompatibility complex class I molecules

Sungjin Kim; Jennifer Poursine-Laurent; Steven M. Truscott; Lonnie Lybarger; Yun Jeong Song; Liping Yang; Anthony R. French; John B. Sunwoo; Suzanne Lemieux; Ted H. Hansen; Wayne M. Yokoyama

Self versus non-self discrimination is a central theme in biology from plants to vertebrates, and is particularly relevant for lymphocytes that express receptors capable of recognizing self-tissues and foreign invaders. Comprising the third largest lymphocyte population, natural killer (NK) cells recognize and kill cellular targets and produce pro-inflammatory cytokines. These potentially self-destructive effector functions can be controlled by inhibitory receptors for the polymorphic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules that are ubiquitously expressed on target cells. However, inhibitory receptors are not uniformly expressed on NK cells, and are germline-encoded by a set of polymorphic genes that segregate independently from MHC genes. Therefore, how NK-cell self-tolerance arises in vivo is poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that NK cells acquire functional competence through ‘licensing’ by self-MHC molecules. Licensing involves a positive role for MHC-specific inhibitory receptors and requires the cytoplasmic inhibitory motif originally identified in effector responses. This process results in two types of self-tolerant NK cells—licensed or unlicensed—and may provide new insights for exploiting NK cells in immunotherapy. This self-tolerance mechanism may be more broadly applicable within the vertebrate immune system because related germline-encoded inhibitory receptors are widely expressed on other immune cells.


Nature Immunology | 2012

Gene-expression profiles and transcriptional regulatory pathways that underlie the identity and diversity of mouse tissue macrophages

Emmanuel L. Gautier; Tal Shay; Jennifer Miller; Melanie Greter; Claudia Jakubzick; Stoyan Ivanov; Julie Helft; Andrew Chow; Kutlu G. Elpek; Simon Gordonov; Amin R. Mazloom; Avi Ma'ayan; Wei-Jen Chua; Ted H. Hansen; Shannon J. Turley; Miriam Merad; Gwendalyn J. Randolph

We assessed gene expression in tissue macrophages from various mouse organs. The diversity in gene expression among different populations of macrophages was considerable. Only a few hundred mRNA transcripts were selectively expressed by macrophages rather than dendritic cells, and many of these were not present in all macrophages. Nonetheless, well-characterized surface markers, including MerTK and FcγR1 (CD64), along with a cluster of previously unidentified transcripts, were distinctly and universally associated with mature tissue macrophages. TCEF3, C/EBP-α, Bach1 and CREG-1 were among the transcriptional regulators predicted to regulate these core macrophage-associated genes. The mRNA encoding other transcription factors, such as Gata6, was associated with single macrophage populations. We further identified how these transcripts and the proteins they encode facilitated distinguishing macrophages from dendritic cells.


PLOS Biology | 2010

Human Mucosal Associated Invariant T Cells Detect Bacterially Infected Cells

Marielle C. Gold; Stefania Cerri; Susan Smyk-Pearson; Meghan E. Cansler; Todd M. Vogt; Jacob Delepine; Ervina Winata; Gwendolyn Swarbrick; Wei Jen Chua; Yik Y. L. Yu; Olivier Lantz; Matthew S. Cook; Megan Null; David B. Jacoby; Melanie J. Harriff; Deborah A. Lewinsohn; Ted H. Hansen; David M. Lewinsohn

A first indication of the biological role of mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cells reveals that this discrete T cell subset is broadly reactive to bacterial infection. In particular MAIT cells recognize Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected lung airway epithelial cells via the most evolutionarily conserved major histocompatibility molecule.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2009

MHC class I antigen presentation: learning from viral evasion strategies

Ted H. Hansen; Marlene Bouvier

The cell surface display of peptides by MHC class I molecules to lymphocytes provides the host with an important surveillance mechanism to protect against invading pathogens. However, in turn, viruses have evolved elegant strategies to inhibit various stages of the MHC class I antigen presentation pathway and prevent the display of viral peptides. This Review highlights how the elucidation of mechanisms of viral immune evasion is important for advancing our understanding of virus–host interactions and can further our knowledge of the MHC class I presentation pathway as well as other cellular pathways.


Immunity | 1994

Bcl-2 is upregulated at the CD4+ CD8+ stage during positive selection and promotes thymocyte differentiation at several control Points

Gerald P. Linette; Michael J. Grusby; Stephen M. Hedrick; Ted H. Hansen; Laurie H. Glimcher; Stanley J. Korsmeyer

In vivo thymocyte maturation models were used to investigate the differentiation role of Bcl-2. In alpha/beta T cell receptor (TCR) class II-restricted transgenic mice, Bcl-2 was upregulated at the CD4+ CD8+ stage during positive selection. The lckpr-bcl2 transgene was bred onto MHC classes I-I- and II-I-, MHC-I-, and alpha/beta TCR backgrounds to determine whether Bcl-2 promoted thymocyte maturation in the absence of coreceptor-MHC interaction. Bcl-2 rescued CD8+ thymocytes in class I-I- and alpha/beta TCR in mice; however, they were not exported to the periphery. Bcl-2 had no effect on CD4 lineage maturation in class II-I- mice. No single-positive thymocytes accumulate in MHC-I- mice despite overexpressed Bcl-2. Thus, Bcl-2 enables selection of certain TCRs on class II molecules and their differentiation along the CD8 pathway; however, Bcl-2 did not substitute for positive selection. In RAG-1-I- mice, Bcl-2 promoted differentiation to the CD4+ CD8+ stage. Bcl-2 can promote thymocyte maturation at several control points.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Ubiquitination of serine, threonine, or lysine residues on the cytoplasmic tail can induce ERAD of MHC-I by viral E3 ligase mK3

Xiaoli Wang; Roger A. Herr; Wei Jen Chua; Lonnie Lybarger; Emmanuel J. H. J. Wiertz; Ted H. Hansen

The mechanism by which substrates for endoplasmic reticulum–associated degradation are retrotranslocated to the cytosol remains largely unknown, although ubiquitination is known to play a key role. The mouse γ-herpesvirus protein mK3 is a viral RING-CH–type E3 ligase that specifically targets nascent major histocompatibility complex I heavy chain (HC) for degradation, thus blocking the immune detection of virus-infected cells. To address the question of how HC is retrotranslocated and what role mK3 ligase plays in this action, we investigated ubiquitin conjugation sites on HC using mutagenesis and biochemistry approaches. In total, our data demonstrate that mK3-mediated ubiquitination can occur via serine, threonine, or lysine residues on the HC tail, each of which is sufficient to induce the rapid degradation of HC. Given that mK3 has numerous cellular and viral homologues, it will be of considerable interest to determine the pervasiveness of this novel mechanism of ubiquitination.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

Antigen-loaded MR1 tetramers define T cell receptor heterogeneity in mucosal-associated invariant T cells

Rangsima Reantragoon; Alexandra J. Corbett; Isaac G. Sakala; Nicholas A. Gherardin; John B. Furness; Zhenjun Chen; Sidonia B. G. Eckle; Adam P. Uldrich; Richard W. Birkinshaw; Onisha Patel; Lyudmila Kostenko; Bronwyn Meehan; Katherine Kedzierska; Ligong Liu; David P. Fairlie; Ted H. Hansen; Dale I. Godfrey; Jamie Rossjohn; James McCluskey; Lars Kjer-Nielsen

Generation of antigen-loaded MR1 tetramers that specifically stain MAIT cells identifies heterogeneity in phenotypes and TCR repertoires in humans and mice.


European Journal of Immunology | 2014

CD161 ++ CD8 + T cells, including the MAIT cell subset, are specifically activated by IL-12+IL-18 in a TCR-independent manner

James E. Ussher; Matthew Bilton; Emma Attwod; Jonathan Shadwell; Rachel Richardson; Catherine de Lara; Elisabeth Mettke; Ayako Kurioka; Ted H. Hansen; Paul Klenerman; Christian B. Willberg

CD161++CD8+ T cells represent a novel subset that is dominated in adult peripheral blood by mucosal‐associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, as defined by the expression of a variable‐α chain 7.2 (Vα7.2)‐Jα33 TCR, and IL‐18Rα. Stimulation with IL‐18+IL‐12 is known to induce IFN‐γ by both NK cells and, to a more limited extent, T cells. Here, we show the CD161++ CD8+ T‐cell population is the primary T‐cell population triggered by this mechanism. Both CD161++Vα7.2+ and CD161++Vα7.2− T‐cell subsets responded to IL‐12+IL‐18 stimulation, demonstrating this response was not restricted to the MAIT cells, but to the CD161++ phenotype. Bacteria and TLR agonists also indirectly triggered IFN‐γ expression via IL‐12 and IL‐18. These data show that CD161++ T cells are the predominant T‐cell population that responds directly to IL‐12+IL‐18 stimulation. Furthermore, our findings broaden the potential role of MAIT cells beyond bacterial responsiveness to potentially include viral infections and other inflammatory stimuli.


Blood | 2013

Early and nonreversible decrease of CD161++/MAIT cells in HIV infection

Cormac Cosgrove; James E. Ussher; Andri Rauch; Kathleen Gärtner; Ayako Kurioka; Michael H. Hühn; Krista Adelmann; Yu-Hoi Kang; Joannah R. Fergusson; Peter Simmonds; Philip J. R. Goulder; Ted H. Hansen; Julie M. Fox; Huldrych F. Günthard; Nina Khanna; Fiona Powrie; Alan Steel; Brian Gazzard; Rodney E. Phillips; John Frater; Holm H. Uhlig; Paul Klenerman

HIV infection is associated with immune dysfunction, perturbation of immune-cell subsets and opportunistic infections. CD161++ CD8+ T cells are a tissue-infiltrating population that produce IL17A, IL22, IFN, and TNFα, cytokines important in mucosal immunity. In adults they dominantly express the semi-invariant TCR Vα7.2, the canonical feature of mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cells and have been recently implicated in host defense against pathogens. We analyzed the frequency and function of CD161++ /MAIT cells in peripheral blood and tissue from patients with early stage or chronic-stage HIV infection. We show that the CD161++ /MAIT cell population is significantly decreased in early HIV infection and fails to recover despite otherwise successful treatment. We provide evidence that CD161++ /MAIT cells are not preferentially infected but may be depleted through diverse mechanisms including accumulation in tissues and activation-induced cell death. This loss may impact mucosal defense and could be important in susceptibility to specific opportunistic infections in HIV.


Infection and Immunity | 2012

Polyclonal Mucosa-Associated Invariant T Cells Have Unique Innate Functions in Bacterial Infection

Wei-Jen Chua; Steven M. Truscott; Christopher S. Eickhoff; Azra Blazevic; Daniel F. Hoft; Ted H. Hansen

ABSTRACT Mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are a unique population of αβ T cells in mammals that reside preferentially in mucosal tissues and express an invariant Vα paired with limited Vβ T-cell receptor (TCR) chains. Furthermore, MAIT cell development is dependent upon the expression of the evolutionarily conserved major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class Ib molecule MR1. Using in vitro assays, recent studies have shown that mouse and human MAIT cells are activated by antigen-presenting cells (APCs) infected with diverse microbes, including numerous bacterial strains and yeasts, but not viral pathogens. However, whether MAIT cells play an important, and perhaps unique, role in controlling microbial infection has remained unclear. To probe MAIT cell function, we show here that purified polyclonal MAIT cells potently inhibit intracellular bacterial growth of Mycobacterium bovis BCG in macrophages (MΦ) in coculture assays, and this inhibitory activity was dependent upon MAIT cell selection by MR1, secretion of gamma interferon (IFN-γ), and an innate interleukin 12 (IL-12) signal from infected MΦ. Surprisingly, however, the cognate recognition of MR1 by MAIT cells on the infected MΦ was found to play only a minor role in MAIT cell effector function. We also report that MAIT cell-deficient mice had higher bacterial loads at early times after infection compared to wild-type (WT) mice, demonstrating that MAIT cells play a unique role among innate lymphocytes in protective immunity against bacterial infection.

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Nancy B. Myers

Washington University in St. Louis

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Xiaoli Wang

Washington University in St. Louis

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Janet M. Connolly

Washington University in St. Louis

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Lonnie Lybarger

Washington University in St. Louis

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Daved H. Fremont

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sojung Kim

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joyce C. Solheim

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Beatriz M. Carreno

Washington University in St. Louis

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Michael R. Harris

Washington University in St. Louis

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