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Dive into the research topics where Xuezhi Dai is active.

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Featured researches published by Xuezhi Dai.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

A disease-associated PTPN22 variant promotes systemic autoimmunity in murine models

Xuezhi Dai; Richard G. James; Tania Habib; Swati Singh; Shaun W. Jackson; Socheath Khim; Randall T. Moon; Denny Liggitt; Alejandro Wolf-Yadlin; Jane H. Buckner; David J. Rawlings

Multiple autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, Graves disease, and systemic lupus erythematosus, are associated with an allelic variant of protein tyrosine phosphatase nonreceptor 22 (PTPN22), which encodes the protein LYP. To model the human disease-linked variant LYP-R620W, we generated knockin mice expressing the analogous mutation, R619W, in the murine ortholog PEST domain phosphatase (PEP). In contrast with a previous report, we found that this variant exhibits normal protein stability, but significantly alters lymphocyte function. Aged knockin mice exhibited effector T cell expansion and transitional, germinal center, and age-related B cell expansion as well as the development of autoantibodies and systemic autoimmunity. Further, PEP-R619W affected B cell selection and B lineage-restricted variant expression and was sufficient to promote autoimmunity. Consistent with these features, PEP-R619W lymphocytes were hyperresponsive to antigen-receptor engagement with a distinct profile of tyrosine-phosphorylated substrates. Thus, PEP-R619W uniquely modulates T and B cell homeostasis, leading to a loss in tolerance and autoimmunity.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Altered B Cell Homeostasis Is Associated with Type I Diabetes and Carriers of the PTPN22 Allelic Variant

Tania Habib; Andrew Funk; Mary Rieck; Archana Brahmandam; Xuezhi Dai; Anil K. Panigrahi; Eline T. Luning Prak; Almut Meyer-Bahlburg; Srinath Sanda; Carla J. Greenbaum; David J. Rawlings; Jane H. Buckner

The PTPN22 genetic variant 1858T, encoding Lyp620W, is associated with multiple autoimmune disorders for which the production of autoantibodies is a common feature, suggesting a loss of B cell tolerance. Lyp620W results in blunted BCR signaling in memory B cells. Because BCR signal strength is tightly coupled to central and peripheral tolerance, we examined whether Lyp620W impacts peripheral B cell homeostasis in healthy individuals heterozygous for the PTPN221858T variant. We found that these subjects display alterations in the composition of the B cell pool that include specific expansion of the transitional and anergic IgD+IgM−CD27− B cell subsets. The PTPN22 1858T variant was further associated with significantly diminished BCR signaling and a resistance to apoptosis in both transitional and naive B cells. Strikingly, parallel changes in both BCR signaling and composition of B cell compartment were observed in type 1 diabetic subjects, irrespective of PTPN22 genotype, revealing a novel immune phenotype and likely shared mechanisms leading to a loss of B cell tolerance. Our combined findings suggest that Lyp620W-mediated effects, due in part to the altered BCR signaling threshold, contribute to breakdown of peripheral tolerance and the entry of autoreactive B cells into the naive B cell compartment.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

NLRP3 tyrosine phosphorylation is controlled by protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPN22

Marianne R. Spalinger; Stephanie Kasper; Claudia Gottier; Silvia Lang; Kirstin Atrott; Stephan R. Vavricka; Sylvie Scharl; Petrus G. M. Gutte; Markus G. Grütter; Hans Dietmar Beer; Emmanuel Contassot; Andrew C. Chan; Xuezhi Dai; David J. Rawlings; Florian Mair; Burkhard Becher; Werner Falk; Michael Fried; Gerhard Rogler; Michael Scharl

Inflammasomes form as the result of the intracellular presence of danger-associated molecular patterns and mediate the release of active IL-1β, which influences a variety of inflammatory responses. Excessive inflammasome activation results in severe inflammatory conditions, but physiological IL-1β secretion is necessary for intestinal homeostasis. Here, we have described a mechanism of NLRP3 inflammasome regulation by tyrosine phosphorylation of NLRP3 at Tyr861. We demonstrated that protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor 22 (PTPN22), variants in which are associated with chronic inflammatory disorders, dephosphorylates NLRP3 upon inflammasome induction, allowing efficient NLRP3 activation and subsequent IL-1β release. In murine models, PTPN22 deficiency resulted in pronounced colitis, increased NLRP3 phosphorylation, but reduced levels of mature IL-1β. Conversely, patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that carried an autoimmunity-associated PTPN22 variant had increased IL-1β levels. Together, our results identify tyrosine phosphorylation as an important regulatory mechanism for NLRP3 that prevents aberrant inflammasome activation.


Journal of Immunology | 2015

The Role of PTPN22 Risk Variant in the Development of Autoimmunity: Finding Common Ground between Mouse and Human

David J. Rawlings; Xuezhi Dai; Jane H. Buckner

The PTPN22 1858T variant was among the first single nucleotide polymorphisms to be associated with multiple autoimmune diseases. Lymphocyte tyrosine phosphatase, a coding variant within the tyrosine phosphatases, is known to participate in AgR signaling; the impact of this variant on the immune response and its role in the development of autoimmunity have been a focus of study. These studies used a series of approaches, including transfected cell lines, animal models, and primary human lymphocytes, and identified multiple alterations in cell signaling and function linked to the PTPN22 variant. Conflicting findings led to questions of how best to study the role of this variant in human autoimmunity. In this review, we discuss these differences and the factors that may account for them, as well as show how an integrated approach can lead to a more complete understanding of the mechanisms that promote autoimmunity in the context of the PTPN22 1858T risk variant.


Nature Immunology | 2017

The A946T variant of the RNA sensor IFIH1 mediates an interferon program that limits viral infection but increases the risk for autoimmunity

Jacquelyn A Gorman; Christian Hundhausen; John S. Errett; Amy E.L. Stone; Eric J. Allenspach; Yan Ge; Tanvi Arkatkar; Courtnee Clough; Xuezhi Dai; Socheath Khim; Kathleen Pestal; Denny Liggitt; Karen Cerosaletti; Daniel B. Stetson; Richard G. James; Mohamed Oukka; Patrick Concannon; Michael Gale; Jane H. Buckner; David J. Rawlings

The single-nucleotide polymorphism rs1990760 in the gene encoding the cytosolic viral sensor IFIH1 results in an amino-acid change (A946T; IFIH1T946) that is associated with multiple autoimmune diseases. The effect of this polymorphism on both viral sensing and autoimmune pathogenesis remains poorly understood. Here we found that human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and cell lines expressing the risk variant IFIH1T946 exhibited heightened basal and ligand-triggered production of type I interferons. Consistent with those findings, mice with a knock-in mutation encoding IFIH1T946 displayed enhanced basal expression of type I interferons, survived a lethal viral challenge and exhibited increased penetrance in autoimmune models, including a combinatorial effect with other risk variants. Furthermore, IFIH1T946 mice manifested an embryonic survival defect consistent with enhanced responsiveness to RNA self ligands. Together our data support a model wherein the production of type I interferons driven by an autoimmune risk variant and triggered by ligand functions to protect against viral challenge, which probably accounts for its selection within human populations but provides this advantage at the cost of modestly promoting the risk of autoimmunity.


European Journal of Immunology | 2012

Developmentally Regulated Expression of MEF2C Limits the Response to BCR Engagement in Transitional B Cells

Sarah F. Andrews; Xuezhi Dai; Byoung Y. Ryu; Tod Gulick; David J. Rawlings

Transitional and naïve mature peripheral B cells respond very differently to B‐cell receptor (BCR) cross‐linking. While transitional B cells undergo apoptosis upon BCR engagement, mature B cells survive and proliferate. This differential response correlates with the capacity of mature, but not transitional B cells to transcribe genes that promote cell survival and proliferation, including those encoding c‐Myc and the Bcl‐2 family members Bcl‐xL and A1. We recently demonstrated that transitional B cells fail to assemble transcriptional machinery at the promoter region of these target genes despite equivalent cytoplasmic signaling and nuclear translocation of key transcription factors including NF‐κB and nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT). The transcription factor myocyte enhancer factor‐2C (MEF2C) is regulated by both calcineurin and mitogen‐activated protein kinase signaling pathways, and is essential for proliferation and survival downstream of BCR engagement in mature B cells. In this work, we demonstrate that transitional B cells have intrinsically low levels of MEF2C protein and DNA‐binding activity, and that this developmental difference in MEF2C expression is functionally significant. Forced expression of MEF2C in transitional B cells promoted cell survival, proliferation, and upregulation of pro‐survival genes. Thus, low MEF2C expression limits transitional B‐cell responsiveness to BCR engagement before these cells reach maturity.


European Journal of Immunology | 2018

Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase PTPN22 regulates IL‐1β dependent Th17 responses by modulating dectin‐1 signaling in mice

Harriet A. Purvis; Fiona Clarke; Christine K. Jordan; Cristina Sanchez Blanco; Georgina H. Cornish; Xuezhi Dai; David J. Rawlings; Rose Zamoyska; Andrew P. Cope

A single nucleotide polymorphism within the PTPN22 gene is a strong genetic risk factor predisposing to the development of multiple autoimmune diseases. PTPN22 regulates Syk and Src family kinases downstream of immuno‐receptors. Fungal β‐glucan receptor dectin‐1 signals via Syk, and dectin‐1 stimulation induces arthritis in mouse models. We investigated whether PTPN22 regulates dectin‐1 dependent immune responses. Bone marrow derived dendritic cells (BMDCs) generated from C57BL/6 wild type (WT) and Ptpn22−/− mutant mice, were pulsed with OVA323‐339 and the dectin‐1 agonist curdlan and co‐cultured in vitro with OT‐II T‐cells or adoptively transferred into OT‐II mice, and T‐cell responses were determined by immunoassay. Dectin‐1 activated Ptpn22−/− BMDCs enhanced T‐cell secretion of IL‐17 in vitro and in vivo in an IL‐1β dependent manner. Immunoblotting revealed that compared to WT, dectin‐1 activated Ptpn22−/− BMDCs displayed enhanced Syk and Erk phosphorylation. Dectin‐1 activation of BMDCs expressing Ptpn22R619W (the mouse orthologue of human PTPN22R620W) also resulted in increased IL‐1β secretion and T‐cell dependent IL‐17 responses, indicating that in the context of dectin‐1 Ptpn22R619W operates as a loss‐of‐function variant. These findings highlight PTPN22 as a novel regulator of dectin‐1 signals, providing a link between genetically conferred perturbations of innate receptor signaling and the risk of autoimmune disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2017

The Autoimmune Risk Variant PTPN22 C1858T Alters B Cell Tolerance at Discrete Checkpoints and Differentially Shapes the Naive Repertoire

Genita Metzler; Xuezhi Dai; Christopher D. Thouvenel; Socheath Khim; Tania Habib; Jane H. Buckner; David J. Rawlings

A common genetic variant in the gene encoding the protein tyrosine phosphatase nonreceptor type 22 (PTPN22 C1858T) has been linked to a wide range of autoimmune disorders. Although a B cell–intrinsic role in promoting disease has been reported, the mechanism(s) through which this variant functions to alter the preimmune B cell repertoire remains unknown. Using a series of polyclonal and transgenic self-reactive models harboring the analogous mutation in murine Ptpn22, we show evidence for enhanced BCR, B cell–activating factor receptor, and CD40 coreceptor programs, leading to broadly enhanced positive selection of B cells at two discrete checkpoints in the bone marrow and spleen. We further identified a bias for selection of B cells into the follicular mature versus marginal zone B cell compartment. Using a biomarker to track a self-reactive H chain in peripheral blood, we found evidence of similarly enhanced positive selection in human carriers of the PTPN22 C1858T variant. Our combined data support a model whereby the risk variant augments the BCR and coreceptor programs throughout B cell development, promoting enrichment of self-reactive specificities into the follicular mature compartment and thereby likely increasing the risk for seeding of autoimmune B cell responses.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPN22 is dispensable for dendritic cell antigen processing and promotion of T-cell activation by dendritic cells

Fiona Clarke; Christine K. Jordan; Enrique Gutiérrez-Martinez; Jack A. Bibby; Cristina Sanchez-Blanco; Georgina H. Cornish; Xuezhi Dai; David J. Rawlings; Rose Zamoyska; Pierre Guermonprez; Andrew P. Cope; Harriet A. Purvis

The PTPN22R620W single nucleotide polymorphism increases the risk of developing multiple autoimmune diseases including type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. PTPN22 is highly expressed in antigen presenting cells (APCs) where the expression of the murine disease associated variant orthologue (Ptpn22R619W) is reported to dysregulate pattern recognition receptor signalling in dendritic cells (DCs) and promote T-cell proliferation. Because T-cell activation is dependent on DC antigen uptake, degradation and presentation, we analysed the efficiency of these functions in splenic and GM-CSF bone marrow derived DC from wild type (WT), Ptpn22-/- or Ptpn22R619W mutant mice. Results indicated no differential ability of DCs to uptake antigen via macropinocytosis or receptor-mediated endocytosis. Antigen degradation and presentation was also equal as was WT T-cell conjugate formation and subsequent T-cell proliferation. Despite the likely presence of multiple phosphatase-regulated pathways in the antigen uptake, processing and presentation pathways that we investigated, we observed that Ptpn22 and the R619W autoimmune associated variant were dispensable. These important findings indicate that under non-inflammatory conditions there is no requirement for Ptpn22 in DC dependent antigen uptake and T-cell activation. Our findings reveal that perturbations in antigen uptake and processing, a fundamental pathway determining adaptive immune responses, are unlikely to provide a mechanism for the risk associated with the Ptpn22 autoimmune associated polymorphism.


Autophagy | 2017

PTPN22 regulates NLRP3-mediated IL1B secretion in an autophagy-dependent manner

Marianne R. Spalinger; Silvia Lang; Claudia Gottier; Xuezhi Dai; David J. Rawlings; Andrew C. Chan; Gerhard Rogler; Michael Scharl

ABSTRACT A variant within the gene locus encoding PTPN22 (protein tyrosine phosphatase, non-receptor type 22) emerged as an important risk factor for auto-inflammatory disorders, including rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus and type 1 diabetes, but at the same time protects from Crohn disease, one of the 2 main forms of inflammatory bowel diseases. We have previously shown that loss of PTPN22 results in decreased NLRP3 (NLR family pyrin domain containing 3) activation and that this effect is mediated via enhanced NLRP3 phosphorylation. However, it is unclear how phosphorylation of NLRP3 mediates its inhibition. Here, we demonstrate that loss of macroautophagy/autophagy abrogates the inhibitory effect on NLRP3 activation observed upon loss of PTPN22. Phosphorylated, but not nonphosphorylated NLRP3 is found in autophagosomes, indicating that NLRP3 phosphorylation mediates its inactivation via promoting sequestration into phagophores, the precursors to autophagosomes. This finding shows that autophagy and NLRP3 inflammasome activation are connected, and that PTPN22 plays a key role in the regulation of those 2 pathways. Given its role in inflammatory disorders, PTPN22 might be an attractive therapeutic target, and understanding the cellular mechanisms modulated by PTPN22 is of crucial importance.

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Jane H. Buckner

Benaroya Research Institute

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Socheath Khim

Seattle Children's Research Institute

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Tania Habib

Benaroya Research Institute

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