Vandana Chaturvedi
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Vandana Chaturvedi.
Nature | 2013
James M. Ertelt; Jeremy M. Kinder; Tony T. Jiang; Xuzhe Zhang; Lijun Xin; Vandana Chaturvedi; Beverly S. Strong; Joseph E. Qualls; Kris A. Steinbrecher; Theodosia A. Kalfa; Aimen F. Shaaban; Sing Sing Way
Newborn infants are highly susceptible to infection. This defect in host defence has generally been ascribed to the immaturity of neonatal immune cells; however, the degree of hyporesponsiveness is highly variable and depends on the stimulation conditions. These discordant responses illustrate the need for a more unified explanation for why immunity is compromised in neonates. Here we show that physiologically enriched CD71+ erythroid cells in neonatal mice and human cord blood have distinctive immunosuppressive properties. The production of innate immune protective cytokines by adult cells is diminished after transfer to neonatal mice or after co-culture with neonatal splenocytes. Neonatal CD71+ cells express the enzyme arginase-2, and arginase activity is essential for the immunosuppressive properties of these cells because molecular inhibition of this enzyme or supplementation with l-arginine overrides immunosuppression. In addition, the ablation of CD71+ cells in neonatal mice, or the decline in number of these cells as postnatal development progresses parallels the loss of suppression, and restored resistance to the perinatal pathogens Listeria monocytogenes and Escherichia coli. However, CD71+ cell-mediated susceptibility to infection is counterbalanced by CD71+ cell-mediated protection against aberrant immune cell activation in the intestine, where colonization with commensal microorganisms occurs swiftly after parturition. Conversely, circumventing such colonization by using antimicrobials or gnotobiotic germ-free mice overrides these protective benefits. Thus, CD71+ cells quench the excessive inflammation induced by abrupt colonization with commensal microorganisms after parturition. This finding challenges the idea that the susceptibility of neonates to infection reflects immune-cell-intrinsic defects and instead highlights processes that are developmentally more essential and inadvertently mitigate innate immune protection. We anticipate that these results will spark renewed investigation into the need for immunosuppression in neonates, as well as improved strategies for augmenting host defence in this vulnerable population.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015
Vandana Chaturvedi; James M. Ertelt; Tony T. Jiang; Jeremy M. Kinder; Lijun Xin; Kathryn Owens; Helen Jones; Sing Sing Way
Mammalian pregnancy requires protection against immunological rejection of the developing fetus bearing discordant paternal antigens. Immune evasion in this developmental context entails silenced expression of chemoattractant proteins (chemokines), thereby preventing harmful immune cells from penetrating the maternal-fetal interface. Here, we demonstrate that fetal wastage triggered by prenatal Listeria monocytogenes infection is driven by placental recruitment of CXCL9-producing inflammatory neutrophils and macrophages that promote infiltration of fetal-specific T cells into the decidua. Maternal CD8+ T cells with fetal specificity upregulated expression of the chemokine receptor CXCR3 and, together with neutrophils and macrophages, were essential for L. monocytogenes-induced fetal resorption. Conversely, decidual accumulation of maternal T cells with fetal specificity and fetal wastage were extinguished by CXCR3 blockade or in CXCR3-deficient mice. Remarkably, protection against fetal wastage and in utero L. monocytogenes invasion was maintained even when CXCR3 neutralization was initiated after infection, and this protective effect extended to fetal resorption triggered by partial ablation of immune-suppressive maternal Tregs, which expand during pregnancy to sustain fetal tolerance. Together, our results indicate that functionally overriding chemokine silencing at the maternal-fetal interface promotes the pathogenesis of prenatal infection and suggest that therapeutically reinforcing this pathway represents a universal approach for mitigating immune-mediated pregnancy complications.
Journal of Immunology | 2014
Tony T. Jiang; Vandana Chaturvedi; James M. Ertelt; Jeremy M. Kinder; Dayna R. Clark; Amy M. Valent; Lijun Xin; Sing Sing Way
The immunological alterations required for successful pregnancy in eutherian placental mammals have remained a scientific enigma since the discovery of MHC haplotype diversity and unique immune signatures among individuals. Within the past 10 years, accumulating data suggest that immune-suppressive regulatory T cells (Tregs) confer essential protective benefits in sustaining tolerance to the semiallogeneic fetus during pregnancy, along with their more established roles in maintaining tolerance to self and “extended self” commensal Ags that averts autoimmunity. Reciprocally, many human pregnancy complications stemming from inadequacies in fetal tolerance have been associated with defects in maternal Tregs. Thus, further elucidating the immunological shifts during pregnancy not only have direct translational implications for improving perinatal health, they have enormous potential for unveiling new clues about how Tregs work in other biological contexts. In this article, epidemiological data in human pregnancy and complementary animal studies implicating a pivotal protective role for maternal Tregs are summarized.
Journal of Immunology | 2014
Lijun Xin; James M. Ertelt; Jared H. Rowe; Tony T. Jiang; Jeremy M. Kinder; Vandana Chaturvedi; Sing Sing Way
Pregnancy stimulates induced Foxp3 expression among maternal CD4+ T cells with fetal specificity. Although sustained maternal regulatory CD4+ T cell (Treg) expansion is essential for maintaining fetal tolerance during pregnancy, the necessity for Foxp3+ cells with fetal specificity remains undefined. In this study, we demonstrate that mitigating Treg differentiation among maternal CD4+ T cells with a single surrogate fetal specificity elicits Ag-specific fetal loss. Using recombinant Listeria monocytogenes to prime stably differentiated Th1 CD4+ T cells with fetal I-Ab:2W1S55–68 specificity refractory to pregnancy-induced Foxp3 expression, we show that Ag delivery by cytoplasmic L. monocytogenes causes selective loss of 2W1S+ offspring through CD4 cell– and IFN-γ–dependent pathways. In contrast, CD4+ T cells primed by L. monocytogenes restricted from the cell cytoplasm are markedly more plastic for induced Foxp3 expression, with normal pregnancy outcomes. Thus, committed Th1 polarization blocks pregnancy induced Treg differentiation among maternal CD4+ T cells with fetal specificity and triggers Ag-specific fetal loss.
Chimerism | 2014
Jeremy M. Kinder; Tony T. Jiang; Dayna R. Clark; Vandana Chaturvedi; Lijun Xin; James M. Ertelt; Sing Sing Way
Long-term maintenance of immune components with defined specificity, without antigen is the hallmark feature of immunological memory. However, there are fundamental differences in how memory CD8+ compared with CD4+ T cells are maintained. After complete antigen elimination, CD8+ T cells can persist as a self-renewing numerically stable cell population, and therefore satisfy the most stringent definition of “memory.” Comparatively, CD4+ T cell maintenance is considerably less stable, often requiring low-level antigen persistence or antigenic reminders. Recent studies show these basic memory features, classically ascribed to effector CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, extend to immune suppressive Foxp3+ regulatory CD4+ T cells (Tregs). In particular, gestational expansion and postpartum retention of maternal Tregs with fetal specificity may explain the protective benefits of primary pregnancy on complications in subsequent pregnancy. Herein, the possibility of ongoing antigenic reminders from fetal cell microchimerism in postpartum maintenance of maternal Tregs with fetal specificity is considered.
JCI insight | 2017
Monica Cappelletti; Pietro Presicce; Matthew J. Lawson; Vandana Chaturvedi; Traci E. Stankiewicz; Simone Vanoni; Isaac T.W. Harley; Jaclyn W. McAlees; Daniel A. Giles; Maria E. Moreno-Fernandez; Cesar M. Rueda; Paranth Senthamaraikannan; Xiaofei Sun; Rebekah Karns; Kasper Hoebe; Edith M. Janssen; Christopher L. Karp; David A. Hildeman; Simon P. Hogan; Suhas G. Kallapur; Claire A. Chougnet; Sing Sing Way; Senad Divanovic
Preterm birth (PTB) is a leading worldwide cause of morbidity and mortality in infants. Maternal inflammation induced by microbial infection is a critical predisposing factor for PTB. However, biological processes associated with competency of pathogens, including viruses, to induce PTB or sensitize for secondary bacterial infection-driven PTB are unknown. We show that pathogen/pathogen-associated molecular pattern-driven activation of type I IFN/IFN receptor (IFNAR) was sufficient to prime for systemic and uterine proinflammatory chemokine and cytokine production and induction of PTB. Similarly, treatment with recombinant type I IFNs recapitulated such effects by exacerbating proinflammatory cytokine production and reducing the dose of secondary inflammatory challenge required for induction of PTB. Inflammatory challenge-driven induction of PTB was eliminated by defects in type I IFN, TLR, or IL-6 responsiveness, whereas the sequence of type I IFN sensing by IFNAR on hematopoietic cells was essential for regulation of proinflammatory cytokine production. Importantly, we also show that type I IFN priming effects are conserved from mice to nonhuman primates and humans, and expression of both type I IFNs and proinflammatory cytokines is upregulated in human PTB. Thus, activation of the type I IFN/IFNAR axis in pregnancy primes for inflammation-driven PTB and provides an actionable biomarker and therapeutic target for mitigating PTB risk.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Lijun Xin; Tony T. Jiang; Vandana Chaturvedi; Jeremy M. Kinder; James M. Ertelt; Jared H. Rowe; Kris A. Steinbrecher; Sing Sing Way
Significance T-cell activation requires cognate antigen encounter plus additional stimulation through B7 costimulatory molecules. This explains why B7 costimulation blockade is therapeutically effective in many autoimmune disorders including diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis. Interestingly, however, intestinal inflammation is uniquely resistant to B7-neutralizing therapies. We show that colonization with commensal bacteria predisposes the intestine to inflammation despite B7 deprivation caused by IL-17–producing T cells that become activated through the acces-sory costimulation molecules ICOSL and OX40L. Reciprocally, intestinal inflammation is silenced when either commensal enteric bacteria or stimulation through ICOSL/OX40L is eliminated. These results suggest that simultaneously neutralizing accessory costimulation molecules may be needed to extinguish inflammation in tissues like the intestine that retain prominent B7-independent pathways for T-cell activation. The costimulatory B7-1 (CD80)/B7-2 (CD86) molecules, along with T-cell receptor stimulation, together facilitate T-cell activation. This explains why in vivo B7 costimulation neutralization efficiently silences a variety of human autoimmune disorders. Paradoxically, however, B7 blockade also potently moderates accumulation of immune-suppressive regulatory T cells (Tregs) essential for protection against multiorgan systemic autoimmunity. Here we show that B7 deprivation in mice overrides the necessity for Tregs in averting systemic autoimmunity and inflammation in extraintestinal tissues, whereas peripherally induced Tregs retained in the absence of B7 selectively mitigate intestinal inflammation caused by Th17 effector CD4+ T cells. The need for additional immune suppression in the intestine reflects commensal microbe-driven T-cell activation through the accessory costimulation molecules ICOSL and OX40L. Eradication of commensal enteric bacteria mitigates intestinal inflammation and IL-17 production triggered by Treg depletion in B7-deficient mice, whereas re-establishing intestinal colonization with Candida albicans primes expansion of Th17 cells with commensal specificity. Thus, neutralizing B7 costimulation uncovers an essential role for Tregs in selectively averting intestinal inflammation by Th17 CD4+ T cells with commensal microbe specificity.
Cellular & Molecular Immunology | 2014
Dayna R. Clark; Vandana Chaturvedi; Jeremy M. Kinder; Tony T. Jiang; Lijun Xin; James M. Ertelt; Sing Sing Way
Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) is an intracellular bacterium with unique predisposition for systemic maternal infection during pregnancy and morbid consequences for the developing fetus. Given the high mortality associated with prenatal Lm infection, strategies for augmenting protective immunity during the exceedingly vulnerable period of pregnancy are urgently needed. Herein, protection conferred by attenuated Lm administered before pregnancy against subsequent virulent Lm prenatal infection was evaluated. We show that protection against secondary Lm infection in non-pregnant mice is sharply moderated during allogeneic pregnancy because significantly more bacteria are recovered from maternal tissues, despite the numerical and functional preservation of pathogen-specific CD8+ T cells. More importantly, preconceptual priming does not protect against in utero invasion or fetal wastage because mice inoculated with attenuated Lm prior to pregnancy and naive pregnant controls each showed near complete fetal resorption and pathogen recovery from individual concepti after Lm infection during pregnancy. Remarkably, the lack of protection against prenatal Lm infection with preconceptual priming in allogeneic pregnancy is restored during syngeneic pregnancy. Thus, maternal–fetal antigen discordance dictates the ineffectiveness of preconceptual vaccination against fetal complications after prenatal Lm infection, despite the numerical and functional preservation of pathogen-specific CD8+ T cells.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Shannon M. Lange; Melanie McKell; Stephanie Schmidt; Austin P. Hossfeld; Vandana Chaturvedi; Jeremy M. Kinder; Jaclyn W. McAlees; Ian P. Lewkowich; Sing Sing Way; Joanne Turner; Joseph E. Qualls
Activation, recruitment, and effector function of T lymphocytes are essential for control of mycobacterial infection. These processes are tightly regulated in T cells by the availability of l-arginine within the microenvironment. In turn, mycobacterial infection dampens T cell responsiveness through arginase induction in myeloid cells, promoting sequestration of l-arginine within the local milieu. Here, we show T cells can replenish intracellular l-arginine through metabolism of l-citrulline to mediate inflammatory function, allowing anti-mycobacterial T cells to overcome arginase-mediated suppression. Furthermore, T cell l-citrulline metabolism is necessary for accumulation of CD4+ T cells at the site of infection, suggesting this metabolic pathway is involved during anti-mycobacterial T cell immunity in vivo. Together, these findings establish a contribution for l-arginine synthesis by T cells during mycobacterial infection, and implicate l-citrulline as a potential immuno-nutrient to modulate host immunity.
Journal of Immunology | 2013
Vandana Chaturvedi; Lauren W. Collison; Clifford S. Guy; Creg J. Workman; Dario A. A. Vignali
We wish to retract the article titled “Human Regulatory T Cells Require IL-35 To Mediate Suppression and Infectious Tolerance” by Vandana Chaturvedi, Lauren W. Collison, Clifford S. Guy, Creg J. Workman, and Dario A. A. Vignali, The Journal of Immunology , 2011, 186: [6661–6666][1]. A recent