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Dive into the research topics where Xiao-Ning Xu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiao-Ning Xu.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Original antigenic sin and apoptosis in the pathogenesis of dengue hemorrhagic fever

Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Wanwisa Dejnirattisai; Xiao-Ning Xu; Sirijitt Vasanawathana; Nattaya Tangthawornchaikul; Aroonrung Chairunsri; Siraporn Sawasdivorn; Thaneeya Duangchinda; Tao Dong; Sarah Rowland-Jones; Pa-thai Yenchitsomanus; Andrew J. McMichael; Prida Malasit; Gavin R. Screaton

Dengue virus presents a growing threat to public health in the developing world. Four major serotypes of dengue virus have been characterized, and epidemiological evidence shows that dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), the more serious manifestation of the disease, occurs more frequently upon reinfection with a second serotype. We have studied dengue virus–specific T-cell responses in Thai children. During acute infection, few dengue-responsive CD8+ T cells were recovered; most of those present showed an activated phenotype and were undergoing programmed cell death. Many dengue-specific T cells were of low affinity for the infecting virus and showed higher affinity for other, probably previously encountered strains. Profound T-cell activation and death may contribute to the systemic disturbances leading to DHF, and original antigenic sin in the T-cell responses may suppress or delay viral elimination, leading to higher viral loads and increased immunopathology.


Nature Medicine | 2012

Preexisting influenza-specific CD4 + T cells correlate with disease protection against influenza challenge in humans

Tom Wilkinson; Chris Ka-fai Li; Cecilia S C Chui; Arthur K Y Huang; Molly R. Perkins; Julia Liebner; Rob Lambkin-Williams; Anthony Gilbert; John Oxford; Ben Nicholas; Karl J. Staples; Tao Dong; Andrew J. McMichael; Xiao-Ning Xu

Protective immunity against influenza virus infection is mediated by neutralizing antibodies, but the precise role of T cells in human influenza immunity is uncertain. We conducted influenza infection studies in healthy volunteers with no detectable antibodies to the challenge viruses H3N2 or H1N1. We mapped T cell responses to influenza before and during infection. We found a large increase in influenza-specific T cell responses by day 7, when virus was completely cleared from nasal samples and serum antibodies were still undetectable. Preexisting CD4+, but not CD8+, T cells responding to influenza internal proteins were associated with lower virus shedding and less severe illness. These CD4+ cells also responded to pandemic H1N1 (A/CA/07/2009) peptides and showed evidence of cytotoxic activity. These cells are an important statistical correlate of homotypic and heterotypic response and may limit severity of influenza infection by new strains in the absence of specific antibody responses. Our results provide information that may aid the design of future vaccines against emerging influenza strains.


Current Biology | 1997

TRICK2, a new alternatively spliced receptor that transduces the cytotoxic signal from TRAIL.

Gavin R. Screaton; Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Xiao-Ning Xu; Alison E. Cowper; Andrew J. McMichael; John I. Bell

A subset of the tumour necrosis factor (TNF) receptor family contain a conserved intracellular motif, the death domain. Engagement of these receptors by their respective ligands initiates a signalling cascade that rapidly leads to cell death by apoptosis. We have cloned a new member of this family, TRICK2, the TRAIL (TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand) receptor inducer of cell killing 2. TRICK2 is expressed in a number of cell types, and to particularly high levels in lymphocytes and spleen. Two isoforms of the TRICK2 mRNA are generated by alternative pre-mRNA splicing and differ by a 29 amino-acid extension to the extracellular domain. Overexpression of TRICK2 rapidly induced apoptosis in 293T cells; this induction was dependent upon the presence of the death domain of TRICK2. Using a soluble molecule containing the TRICK2 extracellular domain, we demonstrated that TRICK2, like DR4 [1], is a receptor for TRAIL/APO-2L [2,3] and could inhibit TRAIL-induced killing of lymphocyte lines, such as the Jurkat T-cell line. TRAIL is upregulated upon lymphocyte activation, as is the intensively studied ligand for Fas, FasL [4]. TRAIL and its receptors might therefore provide another system for the regulation of lymphocyte selection and proliferation, as well as providing an additional weapon in the armoury of cytotoxic lymphocytes.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

Structure of the TRAIL-DR5 complex reveals mechanisms conferring specificity in apoptotic initiation

Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Jonathan M. Grimes; Nan Chen; Xiao-Ning Xu; David I. Stuart; E.Y Jones; Gavin R. Screaton

TRAIL, an apoptosis inducing ligand, has at least four cell surface receptors including the death receptor DR5. Here we report the crystal structure at 2.2 Å resolution of a complex between TRAIL and the extracellular region of DR5. TRAIL forms a central homotrimer around which three DR5 molecules bind. Radical differences in the surface charge of the ligand, together with variation in the alignment of the two receptor domains confer specificity between members of these ligand and receptor families. The existence of a switch mechanism allowing variation in receptor domain alignment may mean that it is possible to engineer receptors with multiple specificities by exploiting contact positions unique to individual receptor–ligand pairs.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

T Cell Responses in Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever: Are Cross-Reactive T Cells Suboptimal?

Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Thaneeya Duangchinda; Wanwisa Dejnirattisai; Sirijit Vasanawathana; Panisadee Avirutnan; Aroonroong Jairungsri; Nuanpan Khemnu; Nattaya Tangthawornchaikul; Pojchong Chotiyarnwong; Kanokwan Sae-Jang; Michael Koch; Yvonne Jones; Andrew J. McMichael; Xiao-Ning Xu; Prida Malasit; Gavin R. Screaton

Dengue virus infection poses a growing public health and economic burden in a number of tropical and subtropical countries. Dengue circulates as a number of quasispecies, which can be divided by serology into four groups or serotypes. An interesting feature of Dengue, recognized over five decades ago, is that most severe cases that show hemorrhagic fever are not suffering from a primary infection. Instead, they are reinfected with a virus of different serotype. This observation poses considerable problems in vaccine design, and it is therefore imperative to gain a full understanding of the mechanisms underlying this immunological enhancement of disease. In this study, we examined a T cell epitope restricted by HLA-A*24, a major MHC class I allele, in Southeast Asia in a cohort of children admitted to a hospital with acute Dengue infection. The cytokine profiles and the degranulation capacity of T cells generated to this epitope are defined and compared across different viral serotypes. Cross-reactive Dengue-specific T cells seem to show suboptimal degranulation but high cytokine production, which may contribute to the development of the vascular leak characteristic of Dengue hemorrhagic fever.


Current Biology | 2000

LICOS, a primordial costimulatory ligand?

D Brodie; Alison V. Collins; Andrea Iaboni; J A Fennelly; Lisa M. Sparks; Xiao-Ning Xu; P A van der Merwe; Simon J. Davis

In mammals, the classical B7 molecules expressed on antigen-presenting cells, B7-1 (CD80) and B7-2 (CD86), bind the structurally related glycoproteins CD28 and CTLA-4 (CD152), generating costimulatory signals that regulate the activation state of T cells. A recently identified human CD28-like protein, ICOS, also induces costimulatory signals in T cells when crosslinked with antibodies, but it is unclear whether ICOS is part of a B7-mediated regulatory pathway of previously unsuspected complexity, or whether it functions independently and in parallel. Here, we report that, rather than binding B7-1 or B7-2, ICOS binds a new B7-related molecule of previously unknown function that we call LICOS (for ligand of ICOS). At 37 degrees C, LICOS binds only to ICOS but, at lower, non-physiological temperatures, it also binds weakly to CD28 and CTLA-4. Sequence comparisons suggest that LICOS is the homologue of a molecule expressed by avian macrophages and of a murine protein whose expression is induced in non-lymphoid organs by tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha). Our results define the components of a distinct and novel costimulatory pathway and raise the possibility that LICOS, rather than B7-1 or B7-2, is the contemporary homologue of a primordial vertebrate costimulatory ligand.


Cell Research | 2005

Expression of TRAIL and TRAIL receptors in normal and malignant tissues.

Raymond A Daniels; Helen Turley; Fiona Clare Kimberley; Xue-Song Liu; Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Paul Chen; Xiao-Ning Xu; Boquan Jin; Francesco Pezzella; Gavin R. Screaton

ABSTRACTTRAIL, tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand, is a member of the TNF family of proteins. Tumour cells were initially found to have increased sensitivity to TRAIL compared with normal cells, raising hopes that TRAIL would prove useful as an anti-tumor agent. The production of reliable monoclonal antibodies against TRAIL and its receptors that can stain fixed specimens will allow a thorough analysis of their expression on normal and malignant tissues. Here we report the generation of monoclonal antibodies against TRAIL and its four membrane-bound receptors (TR1–4), which have been used to stain a range of normal and malignant cells, as routinely fixed specimens. Low levels of TRAIL expression were found to be limited mostly to smooth muscle in lung and spleen as well as glial cells in the cerebellum and follicular cells in the thyroid. Expression of the TRAIL decoy receptors (TR3 and 4) was not as widespread as indicated by Northern blotting, suggesting that they may be less important for the control of TRAIL cytotoxicity than previously thought. TR1 and TR2 expression increases significantly in a number of malignant tissues, but in some common malignancies their expression was low, or patchy, which may limit the therapeutic role of TRAIL. Taken together, we have a panel of monoclonal antibodies that will allow a better assessment of the normal role of TRAIL and allow assessment of biopsy material, possibly allowing the identification of tumors that may be amenable to TRAIL therapy.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004

HIV-specific cytotoxic T cells from long-term survivors select a unique T cell receptor.

Tao Dong; Guillaume Stewart-Jones; Nan Chen; Philippa Easterbrook; Xiao-Ning Xu; Laura Papagno; Victor Appay; Michael P. Weekes; Christopher Conlon; Celsa A. Spina; Susan J. Little; Gavin R. Screaton; Anton van der Merwe; Douglas D. Richman; Andrew J. McMichael; E. Yvonne Jones; Sarah Rowland-Jones

HIV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) are important in controlling HIV replication, but the magnitude of the CTL response does not predict clinical outcome. In four donors with delayed disease progression we identified Vβ13.2 T cell receptors (TCRs) with very similar and unusually long β-chain complementarity determining region 3 (CDR3) regions in CTL specific for the immunodominant human histocompatibility leukocyte antigens (HLA)-B8–restricted human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) nef epitope, FLKEKGGL (FL8). CTL expressing Vβ13.2 TCRs tolerate naturally arising viral variants in the FL8 epitope that escape recognition by other CTL. In addition, they expand efficiently in vitro and are resistant to apoptosis, in contrast to FL8–specific CTL using other TCRs. Selection of Vβ13.2 TCRs by some patients early in the FL8-specific CTL response may be linked with better clinical outcome.


European Journal of Immunology | 2006

HIV-1 down-regulates the expression of CD1d via Nef

Nan Chen; Corinna McCarthy; Hal Drakesmith; Demin Li; Vincenzo Cerundolo; Andrew J. McMichael; Gavin R. Screaton; Xiao-Ning Xu

HIV‐1 has evolved several strategies to subvert host immune responses to the infected cells. One is to inhibit CTL recognition by HIV‐1 Nef‐mediated down‐regulation of MHC‐I expression on the surface of infected cells. Here we report that Nef also reduces the expression of the non‐classical MHC‐I like CD1d molecule, a third lineage of antigen‐presenting molecule, which presents lipid antigens. Nef achieves this by increasing internalization of CD1d molecules from the cell surface and retaining CD1d in the trans‐Golgi‐network (TGN). This effect depends on a tyrosine‐based motif present in CD1 cytoplasmic tail as well as the actions of four Nef motifs, which are known to be involved in the down‐regulation of MHC‐I or CD4. These results suggest that Nef regulates intracellular trafficking of CD1d via a distinct but shared pathway with MHC‐I and CD4. Thus, HIV‐1 reduces the visibility of its infected cells not only to MHC‐I‐restricted T cells but also to CD1d‐restricted NKT cells. Given that CD1d‐restricted T cells have unique effector and regulatory functions in innate and adapted immune responses as compared with their counterpart MHC‐restricted T cells, our data provide additional new insights into molecular basis of HIV‐1‐mediated damage to the immune system.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2000

T cell life and death signalling via TNF-receptor family members

Gavin R. Screaton; Xiao-Ning Xu

An effective immune response requires the rapid and accurate mobilisation of millions of effector cells in an antigen driven fashion. These effector cells must be kept alive long enough to fulfil their function but the majority must then be eliminated, a process known as activation-induced cell death. Recent advances in the field of lymphocyte biology have shed light onto how this balance is maintained and onto the consequences for disease if the homeostatic mechanisms become disturbed.

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Hao Wu

Capital Medical University

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Tao Dong

University of Oxford

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Huiping Yan

Capital Medical University

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Xiaojie Huang

Capital Medical University

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Demin Li

John Radcliffe Hospital

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Nan Chen

John Radcliffe Hospital

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