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Dive into the research topics where Xiang-Yang Tan is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiang-Yang Tan.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

Interleukin (IL)-22 and IL-17 are coexpressed by Th17 cells and cooperatively enhance expression of antimicrobial peptides

Spencer C. Liang; Xiang-Yang Tan; Deborah Luxenberg; Riyez Karim; Kyriaki Dunussi-Joannopoulos; Mary Collins; Lynette A. Fouser

Th17 cells are a distinct lineage of effector CD4+ T cells characterized by their production of interleukin (IL)-17. We demonstrate that Th17 cells also expressed IL-22, an IL-10 family member, at substantially higher amounts than T helper (Th)1 or Th2 cells. Similar to IL-17A, IL-22 expression was initiated by transforming growth factor β signaling in the context of IL-6 and other proinflammatory cytokines. The subsequent expansion of IL-22–producing cells was dependent on IL-23. We further demonstrate that IL-22 was coexpressed in vitro and in vivo with both IL-17A and IL-17F. To study a functional relationship among these cytokines, we examined the expression of antimicrobial peptides by primary keratinocytes treated with combinations of IL-22, IL-17A, and IL-17F. IL-22 in conjunction with IL-17A or IL-17F synergistically induced the expression of β-defensin 2 and S100A9 and additively enhanced the expression of S100A7 and S100A8. Collectively, we have identified IL-22 as a new cytokine expressed by Th17 cells that synergizes with IL-17A or IL-17F to regulate genes associated with skin innate immunity.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003

Inhibition of myostatin in adult mice increases skeletal muscle mass and strength

Lisa-Anne Whittemore; Kening Song; Xiangping Li; Jane Aghajanian; Monique V. Davies; Stefan Girgenrath; Jennifer J. Hill; Mary Jalenak; Pamela Kelley; Andrea Knight; Rich Maylor; Denise O’Hara; Adele A. Pearson; Amira Quazi; Stephanie Ryerson; Xiang-Yang Tan; Kathleen N. Tomkinson; Geertruida M. Veldman; Angela Widom; Jill F. Wright; Steve Wudyka; Liz Zhao; Neil M. Wolfman

A human therapeutic that specifically modulates skeletal muscle growth would potentially provide a benefit for a variety of conditions including sarcopenia, cachexia, and muscular dystrophy. Myostatin, a member of the TGF-beta family of growth factors, is a known negative regulator of muscle mass, as mice lacking the myostatin gene have increased muscle mass. Thus, an inhibitor of myostatin may be useful therapeutically as an anabolic agent for muscle. However, since myostatin is expressed in both developing and adult muscles, it is not clear whether it regulates muscle mass during development or in adults. In order to test the hypothesis that myostatin regulates muscle mass in adults, we generated an inhibitory antibody to myostatin and administered it to adult mice. Here we show that mice treated pharmacologically with an antibody to myostatin have increased skeletal muscle mass and increased grip strength. These data show for the first time that myostatin acts postnatally as a negative regulator of skeletal muscle growth and suggest that myostatin inhibitors could provide a therapeutic benefit in diseases for which muscle mass is limiting.


Critical Care | 2007

Inhibition of the RAGE products increases survival in experimental models of severe sepsis and systemic infection

Emily C Lutterloh; Steven M. Opal; Debra D. Pittman; James C. Keith; Xiang-Yang Tan; Brian Clancy; Helen Palmer; Kim Milarski; Ying Ying Sun; John E. Palardy; Nicholas Parejo; Noubar Kessimian

IntroductionThe receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE), a multi-ligand member of the immunoglobulin superfamily, contributes to acute and chronic disease processes, including sepsis.MethodsWe studied the possible therapeutic role of RAGE inhibition in the cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model of polymicrobial sepsis and a model of systemic listeriosis using mice genetically deficient in RAGE expression or mice injected with a rat anti-murine RAGE monoclonal antibody.ResultsThe 7-day survival rates after CLP were 80% for RAGE-/- mice (n = 15) (P < 0.01 versus wild-type), 69% for RAGE+/- mice (n = 23), and 37% for wild-type mice (n = 27). Survival benefits were evident in BALB/c mice given anti-RAGE antibody (n = 15 per group) over serum-treated control animals (P < 0.05). Moreover, delayed treatment with anti-RAGE antibody up to 24 hours after CLP resulted in a significant survival benefit compared with control mice. There was no significant increase in tissue colony counts from enteric Gram-negative or Gram-positive bacteria in animals treated with anti-RAGE antibody. RAGE-/-, RAGE+/-, and anti-RAGE antibody-treated animals were resistant to lethality from Listeria monocytogenes by almost two orders of magnitude compared with wild-type mice.ConclusionFurther studies are warranted to determine the clinical utility of anti-RAGE antibody as a novel treatment for sepsis.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Complement C3a, CpG Oligos, and DNA/C3a Complex Stimulate IFN-α Production in a Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Product-Dependent Manner

Benfang Helen Ruan; Xin Li; Aaron Winkler; Kristina Cunningham; Jun Kuai; Rita Greco; Karl Nocka; Lori Fitz; Jill F. Wright; Debra D. Pittman; Xiang-Yang Tan; Janet E. Paulsen; Lih Ling Lin; David Winkler

The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is a multiligand transmembrane receptor implicated in a number of diseases including autoimmune diseases. To further understand the pathogenic mechanism of RAGE in these diseases, we searched for additional ligands. We discovered that C3a bound to RAGE with an EC50 of 1.9 nM in an ELISA, and the binding was increased both in magnitude (by >2-fold) and in affinity (EC50 70 pM) in the presence of human stimulatory unmethylated cytosine-guanine-rich DNA A (hCpGAs). Surface plasmon resonance and fluorescence anisotropy analyses demonstrated that hCpGAs could bind directly to RAGE and C3a and form a ternary complex. In human PBMCs, C3a increased IFN-α production in response to low levels of hCpGAs, and this synergy was blocked by soluble RAGE or by an Ab directed against RAGE. IFN-α production was reduced in response to mouse CpGAs and C3a in RAGE−/− mouse bone marrow cells compared wild-type mice. Taken together, these data demonstrate that RAGE is a receptor for C3a and CpGA. Through direct interaction, C3a and CpGA synergize to increase IFN-α production in a RAGE-dependent manner and stimulate an innate immune response. These findings indicate a potential role of RAGE in autoimmune diseases that show accumulation of immunostimulatory DNA and C3a.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2008

Interleukin-13 Neutralization by Two Distinct Receptor Blocking Mechanisms Reduces Immunoglobulin E Responses and Lung Inflammation in Cynomolgus Monkeys

Marion T. Kasaian; Xiang-Yang Tan; Macy Jin; Lori Fitz; Kimberly Marquette; Nancy Wood; Timothy A. Cook; Julie Lee; Angela Widom; Rita Agostinelli; Andrea Bree; Franklin J. Schlerman; Stephane Olland; Michael Wadanoli; Joseph P. Sypek; Davinder Gill; Samuel J. Goldman; Lioudmila Tchistiakova

Interleukin (IL)-13 is a key cytokine driving allergic and asthmatic responses and contributes to airway inflammation in cynomolgus monkeys after segmental challenge with Ascaris suum antigen. IL-13 bioactivity is mediated by a heterodimeric receptor (IL-13Rα1/IL-4Rα) and can be inhibited in vitro by targeting IL-13 interaction with either chain. However, in cytokine systems, in vitro neutralization activity may not always predict inhibitory function in vivo. To address the efficacy of two different IL-13 neutralization mechanisms in a primate model of atopic disease, two humanized monoclonal antibodies to IL-13 were generated, with highly homologous properties, differing in epitope recognition. Ab01 blocks IL-13 interaction with IL-4Rα, and Ab02 blocks IL-13 interaction with IL-13Rα1. In a cynomolgus monkey model of IgE responses to A. suum antigen, both Ab01 and Ab02 effectively reduced serum titers of Ascaris-specific IgE and diminished ex vivo Ascaris-triggered basophil histamine release, assayed 8 weeks after a single administration of antibody. The two antibodies also produced comparable reductions in pulmonary inflammation after lung segmental challenge with Ascaris antigen. Increased serum levels of IL-13, lacking demonstrable biological activity, were seen postchallenge in animals given either anti-IL-13 antibody but not in control animals given human IgG of irrelevant specificity. These findings demonstrate a potent effect of IL-13 neutralization on IgE-mediated atopic responses in a primate system and show that IL-13 can be efficiently neutralized by targeting either the IL-4Rα-binding epitope or the IL-13Rα1-binding epitope.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

IL-13 Antibodies Influence IL-13 Clearance in Humans by Modulating Scavenger Activity of IL-13Rα2

Marion Kasaian; Donald Raible; Kimberly Marquette; Timothy A. Cook; Simon Zhou; Xiang-Yang Tan; Lioudmila Tchistiakova

Human studies using Abs to two different, nonoverlapping epitopes of IL-13 suggested that epitope specificity can have a clinically significant impact on clearance of IL-13. We propose that Ab modulation of IL-13 interaction with IL-13Rα2 underlies this effect. Two Abs were administered to healthy subjects and mild asthmatics in separate dose-ranging studies and allergen-challenge studies. IMA-638 allows IL-13 interaction with IL-13Rα1 or IL-13Rα2 but blocks recruitment of IL-4Rα to the IL-13/IL-13Rα1 complex, whereas IMA-026 competes with IL-13 interaction with IL-13Rα1 and IL-13Rα2. We found ∼10-fold higher circulating titer of captured IL-13 in subjects treated with IMA-026 compared with those administered IMA-638. To understand how this difference could be related to epitope, we asked whether either Ab affects IL-13 internalization through cell surface IL-13Rα2. Humans inducibly express cell surface IL-13Rα2 but lack the soluble form that regulates IL-13 responses in mice. Cells with high IL-13Rα2 expression rapidly and efficiently depleted extracellular IL-13, and this activity persisted in the presence of IMA-638 but not IMA-026. The potency and efficiency of this clearance pathway suggest that cell surface IL-13Rα2 acts as a scavenger for IL-13. These findings could have important implications for the design and characterization of IL-13 antagonists.


Matrix Biology | 2004

ADAMTS-8 exhibits aggrecanase activity and is expressed in human articular cartilage

Lisa A. Collins-Racie; Carl R. Flannery; Weilan Zeng; Christopher John Corcoran; Bethany Annis-Freeman; Michael J. Agostino; Maya Arai; Elizabeth DiBlasio-Smith; Andrew J. Dorner; Katy E. Georgiadis; Macy Jin; Xiang-Yang Tan; Elisabeth A. Morris; Edward R. Lavallie


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2007

IL-13 blockade reduces lung inflammation after Ascaris suum challenge in cynomolgus monkeys

Andrea Bree; Franklin J. Schlerman; Michael Wadanoli; Lioudmila Tchistiakova; Kimberly Marquette; Xiang-Yang Tan; Bruce A. Jacobson; Angela Widom; Timothy A. Cook; Nancy Wood; Suresh Vunnum; Rustem Krykbaev; Xin Xu; Debra D. Donaldson; Samuel J. Goldman; Joseph P. Sypek; Marion T. Kasaian


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2007

Efficacy of IL-13 neutralization in a sheep model of experimental asthma.

Marion T. Kasaian; Debra D. Donaldson; Lioudmila Tchistiakova; Kimberly Marquette; Xiang-Yang Tan; Ashfaq Ahmed; Bruce A. Jacobson; Angela Widom; Timothy A. Cook; Xin Xu; Anthony Barry; Samuel J. Goldman; William M. Abraham


International Immunopharmacology | 2004

Temporal associations between interleukin 22 and the extracellular domains of IL-22R and IL-10R2

Jing Li; Kathy Tomkinson; Xiang-Yang Tan; Paul W. Wu; Grace Yan; Vikki Spaulding; Bijia Deng; Bethany Annis-Freeman; Kathleen Heveron; Richard Zollner; Gerard De Zutter; Jill F. Wright; Tara K. Crawford; Wei Liu; Kenneth Jacobs; Neil M. Wolfman; Vincent Ling; Debra D. Pittman; Geertruida M. Veldman; Lynette A. Fouser

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Pamela Kelley

University of Pennsylvania

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