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Dive into the research topics where Timothy Tree is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy Tree.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

Autoreactive T cell responses show proinflammatory polarization in diabetes but a regulatory phenotype in health

Sefina Arif; Timothy Tree; Thomas P. Astill; Jennifer M. Tremble; Amanda J. Bishop; Colin Mark Dayan; Bart O. Roep; Mark Peakman

According to the quality of response they mediate, autoreactive T cells recognizing islet beta cell peptides could represent both disease effectors in the development of type 1 diabetes (T1DM) and directors of tolerance in nondiabetic individuals or those undergoing preventative immunotherapy. A combination of the rarity of these cells, inadequate technology, and poorly defined epitopes, however, has hampered examination of this paradigm. We have identified a panel of naturally processed islet epitopes by direct elution from APCs bearing HLA-DR4. Employing these epitopes in a sensitive, novel cytokine enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot assay, we show that the quality of autoreactive T cells in patients with T1DM exhibits extreme polarization toward a proinflammatory Th1 phenotype. Furthermore, we demonstrate that rather than being unresponsive, the majority of nondiabetic, HLA-matched control subjects also manifest a response against islet peptides, but one that shows extreme T regulatory cell (Treg, IL-10-secreting) bias. We conclude that development of T1DM depends on the balance of autoreactive Th1 and Treg cells, which may be open to favorable manipulation by immune intervention.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

CTLs are targeted to kill β cells in patients with type 1 diabetes through recognition of a glucose-regulated preproinsulin epitope

Ania Skowera; Richard Ellis; Ruben Varela-Calvino; Sefina Arif; Guo Cai Huang; Cassie Van-Krinks; Anna Zaremba; Chloe L. Rackham; Jennifer S. Allen; Timothy Tree; Min Zhao; Colin Mark Dayan; Andrew K. Sewell; Wendy W. J. Unger; Jan W. Drijfhout; Ferry Ossendorp; Bart O. Roep; Mark Peakman

The final pathway of beta cell destruction leading to insulin deficiency, hyperglycemia, and clinical type 1 diabetes is unknown. Here we show that circulating CTLs can kill beta cells via recognition of a glucose-regulated epitope. First, we identified 2 naturally processed epitopes from the human preproinsulin signal peptide by elution from HLA-A2 (specifically, the protein encoded by the A*0201 allele) molecules. Processing of these was unconventional, requiring neither the proteasome nor transporter associated with processing (TAP). However, both epitopes were major targets for circulating effector CD8+ T cells from HLA-A2+ patients with type 1 diabetes. Moreover, cloned preproinsulin signal peptide-specific CD8+ T cells killed human beta cells in vitro. Critically, at high glucose concentration, beta cell presentation of preproinsulin signal epitope increased, as did CTL killing. This study provides direct evidence that autoreactive CTLs are present in the circulation of patients with type 1 diabetes and that they can kill human beta cells. These results also identify a mechanism of self-antigen presentation that is under pathophysiological regulation and could expose insulin-producing beta cells to increasing cytotoxicity at the later stages of the development of clinical diabetes. Our findings suggest that autoreactive CTLs are important targets for immune-based interventions in type 1 diabetes and argue for early, aggressive insulin therapy to preserve remaining beta cells.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2008

Increased resistance to CD4+CD25hi regulatory T cell-mediated suppression in patients with type 1 diabetes

J. M. Lawson; Jennifer M. Tremble; Colin Mark Dayan; H. Beyan; R. D. G. Leslie; Mark Peakman; Timothy Tree

Type I diabetes (T1D) is a T cell‐mediated autoimmune disease characterized by loss of tolerance to islet autoantigens, leading to the destruction of insulin‐producing beta cells. Peripheral tolerance to self is maintained in health through several regulatory mechanisms, including a population of CD4+CD25hi naturally occurring regulatory T cells (Tregs), defects in which could contribute to loss of self‐tolerance in patients with T1D. We have reported previously that near to T1D onset, patients demonstrate a reduced level of suppression by CD4+CD25hi Tregs of autologous CD4+CD25‐ responder cells. Here we demonstrate that this defective regulation is also present in subjects with long‐standing T1D (> 3 years duration; P = 0·009). No difference was observed in forkhead box P3 or CD127 expression on CD4+CD25hi T cells in patients with T1D that could account for this loss of suppression. Cross‐over co‐culture assays demonstrate a relative resistance to CD4+CD25hi Treg‐mediated suppression within the CD4+CD25‐ T cells in all patients tested (P = 0·002), while there appears to be heterogeneity in the functional ability of CD4+CD25hi Tregs from patients. In conclusion, this work demonstrates that defective regulation is a feature of T1D regardless of disease duration and that an impaired ability of responder T cells to be suppressed contributes to this defect.


Diabetes | 2011

Peripheral and Islet Interleukin-17 Pathway Activation Characterizes Human Autoimmune Diabetes and Promotes Cytokine-Mediated β-Cell Death

Sefina Arif; Fabrice Moore; Katherine Marks; Thomas Bouckenooghe; Colin Mark Dayan; Raquel Planas; Marta Vives-Pi; Jake Powrie; Timothy Tree; Piero Marchetti; Guo Cai Huang; Esteban Nicolas Gurzov; Ricardo Pujol-Borrell; Decio L. Eizirik; Mark Peakman

OBJECTIVE CD4 T-cells secreting interleukin (IL)-17 are implicated in several human autoimmune diseases, but their role in type 1 diabetes has not been defined. To address the relevance of such cells, we examined IL-17 secretion in response to β-cell autoantigens, IL-17A gene expression in islets, and the potential functional consequences of IL-17 release for β-cells. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Peripheral blood CD4 T-cell responses to β-cell autoantigens (proinsulin, insulinoma-associated protein, and GAD65 peptides) were measured by IL-17 enzyme-linked immunospot assay in patients with new-onset type 1 diabetes (n = 50). mRNA expression of IL-17A and IFNG pathway genes was studied by qRT-PCR using islets obtained from subjects who died 5 days and 10 years after diagnosis of disease, respectively, and from matched control subjects. IL-17 effects on the function of human islets, rat β-cells, and the rat insulinoma cell line INS-1E were examined. RESULTS A total of 27 patients (54%) showed IL-17 reactivity to one or more β-cell peptides versus 3 of 30 (10%) control subjects (P = 0.0001). In a single case examined close to diagnosis, islet expression of IL17A, RORC, and IL22 was detected. It is noteworthy that we show that IL-17 mediates significant and reproducible enhancement of IL-1β/interferon (IFN)-γ–induced and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α/IFN-γ–induced apoptosis in human islets, rat β-cells, and INS-1E cells, in association with significant upregulation of β-cell IL17RA expression via activation of the transcription factors STAT1 and nuclear factor (NF)-κB. CONCLUSIONS Circulating IL-17+ β-cell–specific autoreactive CD4 T-cells are a feature of type 1 diabetes diagnosis. We disclose a novel pathway to β-cell death involving IL-17 and STAT1 and NF-κB, rendering this cytokine a novel disease biomarker and potential therapeutic target.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Type 1 Diabetes-Associated IL2RA Variation Lowers IL-2 Signaling and Contributes to Diminished CD4+CD25+ Regulatory T Cell Function

Garima Garg; Jennifer R. Tyler; Jennie H. M. Yang; Antony J. Cutler; Kate Downes; Marcin L. Pekalski; Gwynneth L. Bell; Sarah Nutland; Mark Peakman; John A. Todd; Linda S. Wicker; Timothy Tree

Numerous reports have demonstrated that CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) from individuals with a range of human autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes, are deficient in their ability to control autologous proinflammatory responses when compared with nondiseased, control individuals. Treg dysfunction could be a primary, causal event or may result from perturbations in the immune system during disease development. Polymorphisms in genes associated with Treg function, such as IL2RA, confer a higher risk of autoimmune disease. Although this suggests a primary role for defective Tregs in autoimmunity, a link between IL2RA gene polymorphisms and Treg function has not been examined. We addressed this by examining the impact of an IL2RA haplotype associated with type 1 diabetes on Treg fitness and suppressive function. Studies were conducted using healthy human subjects to avoid any confounding effects of disease. We demonstrated that the presence of an autoimmune disease-associated IL2RA haplotype correlates with diminished IL-2 responsiveness in Ag-experienced CD4+ T cells, as measured by phosphorylation of STAT5a, and is associated with lower levels of FOXP3 expression by Tregs and a reduction in their ability to suppress proliferation of autologous effector T cells. These data offer a rationale that contributes to the molecular and cellular mechanisms through which polymorphisms in the IL-2RA gene affect immune regulation, and consequently upon susceptibility to autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.


Diabetes | 2009

Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells Are Proportionally Expanded at Diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes and Enhance Islet Autoantigen Presentation to T-Cells Through Immune Complex Capture

Jennifer S. Allen; Karl Pang; Ania Skowera; Richard Ellis; Chloe L. Rackham; Biliana Lozanoska-Ochser; Timothy Tree; R. David Leslie; Jennifer M. Tremble; Colin Mark Dayan; Mark Peakman

OBJECTIVE—Immune-mediated destruction of β-cells resulting in type 1 diabetes involves activation of proinflammatory, islet autoreactive T-cells, a process under the control of dendritic cells of the innate immune system. We tested the hypothesis that type 1 diabetes development is associated with disturbance of blood dendritic cell subsets that could enhance islet-specific autoimmunity. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We examined blood dendritic cells (plasmacytoid and myeloid) in 40 patients with recent-onset diabetes (median duration 28 days) and matched control subjects. We also examined the relative ability of different dendritic cell subsets to process and present soluble or immune complexed islet cell autoantigen (the islet tyrosine phosphatase IA-2) to responder CD4 T-cells. RESULTS—The balance of blood dendritic cells was profoundly disturbed at diabetes diagnosis, with a significantly elevated proportion of plasmacytoid and reduction of myeloid cells compared with control subjects. Dendritic cell subset distribution was normal in long-standing disease and in patients with type 2 diabetes. Both dendritic cell subsets processed and presented soluble IA-2 to CD4 T-cells after short-term culture, but only plasmacytoid dendritic cells enhanced (by as much as 100%) autoantigen presentation in the presence of IA-2+ autoantibody patient serum. CONCLUSIONS—The plasmacytoid subset of dendritic cells is overrepresented in the blood close to diabetes onset and shows a distinctive ability to capture islet autoantigenic immune complexes and enhance autoantigen-driven CD4 T-cell activation. This suggests a synergistic proinflammatory role for plasmacytoid dendritic cells and islet cell autoantibodies in type 1 diabetes.


Diabetes | 2010

Naturally Arising Human CD4 T-Cells That Recognize Islet Autoantigens and Secrete Interleukin-10 Regulate Proinflammatory T-Cell Responses via Linked Suppression

Timothy Tree; Jennifer Lawson; Hannah Edwards; Ania Skowera; Sefina Arif; Bart O. Roep; Mark Peakman

OBJECTIVE Regulatory T-cells (Tregs) recognizing islet autoantigens are proposed as a key mechanism in the maintenance of self-tolerance and protection from type 1 diabetes. To date, however, detailed information on such cells in humans, and insight into their mechanisms of action, has been lacking. We previously reported that a subset of CD4 T-cells secreting high levels of the immunosuppressive cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10) is significantly associated with late onset of type 1 diabetes and is constitutively present in a majority of nondiabetic individuals. Here, we test the hypothesis that these T-cells represent a naturally generated population of Tregs capable of suppressing proinflammatory T-cell responses. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We isolated and cloned islet-specific IL-10–secreting CD4+ T-cells from nondiabetic individuals after brief ex vivo exposure to islet autoantigens using cytokine capture technology and examined their phenotype and regulatory potential. RESULTS Islet-specific IL-10+ CD4 T-cells are potent suppressors of Th1 effector cells, operating through a linked suppression mechanism in which there is an absolute requirement for the cognate antigen of both the regulatory and effector T-cells to be presented by the same antigen-presenting cell (APC). The regulatory T-cells secrete perforin and granzymes, and suppression is associated with the specific killing of APCs presenting antigen to effector T-cells. CONCLUSIONS This hitherto undescribed population of islet autoantigen–specific Tregs displays unique characteristics that offer exquisite specificity and control over the potential for pathological autoreactivity and may provide a suitable target with which to strengthen β-cell–specific tolerance.


European Journal of Immunology | 2013

CD161 expression characterizes a subpopulation of human regulatory T cells that produces IL‐17 in a STAT3‐dependent manner

Behdad Afzali; Peter Mitchell; Francis C. Edozie; Giovanni A.M. Povoleri; Sophie E. Dowson; Laura Demandt; Gina J. Walter; James B. Canavan; Cristiano Scottà; Bina Menon; Prabhjoat Chana; Wafa Khamri; Shahram Kordasti; Susanne Heck; Bodo Grimbacher; Timothy Tree; Andrew P. Cope; Leonie S. Taams; Robert I. Lechler; Susan John; Giovanna Lombardi

Treg cells are critical for the prevention of autoimmune diseases and are thus prime candidates for cell‐based clinical therapy. However, human Treg cells are “plastic”, and are able to produce IL‐17 under inflammatory conditions. Here, we identify and characterize the human Treg subpopulation that can be induced to produce IL‐17 and identify its mechanisms. We confirm that a subpopulation of human Treg cells produces IL‐17 in vitro when activated in the presence of IL‐1β, but not IL‐6. “IL‐17 potential” is restricted to population III (CD4+CD25hiCD127loCD45RA−) Treg cells expressing the natural killer cell marker CD161. We show that these cells are functionally as suppressive and have similar phenotypic/molecular characteristics to other subpopulations of Treg cells and retain their suppressive function following IL‐17 induction. Importantly, we find that IL‐17 production is STAT3 dependent, with Treg cells from patients with STAT3 mutations unable to make IL‐17. Finally, we show that CD161+ population III Treg cells accumulate in inflamed joints of patients with inflammatory arthritis and are the predominant IL‐17‐producing Treg‐cell population at these sites. As IL‐17 production from this Treg‐cell subpopulation is not accompanied by a loss of regulatory function, in the context of cell therapy, exclusion of these cells from the cell product may not be necessary.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

A mini meta-analysis of studies on CD4+CD25+ T cells in human type 1 diabetes : Report of the immunology of diabetes society T cell workshop

Timothy Tree; Bart O. Roep; Mark Peakman

Abstract:  Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is characterized by a loss of self‐tolerance to islet antigens. In health, immunological tolerance is maintained by multiple central and peripheral mechanisms including the action of a specialized set of regulatory T cells characterized by expression of CD4 and CD25 (CD4+CD25+ Treg). It has been suggested that a defect in this cell population, either numerically or functionally, could contribute to the development of autoimmune diseases, such as T1DM. To investigate this possibility, several research groups have studied the frequency and suppressive capacity of this cell population in individuals with T1DM and, to date, there are four such studies published. We therefore performed a mini meta‐analysis to compare the results in the four published studies, account for differences in their findings, and draw a consensus view on the role of this important cell subset in human T1DM.


Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2014

Immune modulation in humans: implications for type 1 diabetes mellitus

Bart O. Roep; Timothy Tree

Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is the result of autoimmune destruction of pancreatic β cells in genetically predisposed individuals with impaired immune regulation. The insufficiency in the modulation of immune attacks on the β cells might be partly due to genetic causes; indeed, several of the genetic variants that predispose individuals to T1DM have functional features of impaired immune regulation. Whilst defects in immune regulation in patients with T1DM have been identified, many patients seem to have immune regulatory capacities that are indistinguishable from those of healthy individuals. Insight into the regulation of islet autoimmunity might enable us to restore immune imbalances with therapeutic interventions. In this Review, we discuss the current knowledge on immune regulation and dysfunction in humans that is the basis of tissue-specific immune regulation as an alternative to generalized immune suppression.

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Bart O. Roep

Beckman Research Institute

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John A. Todd

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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