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Featured researches published by Yasuhito Hamaguchi.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Maintenance of Long-Lived Plasma Cells and Serological Memory Despite Mature and Memory B Cell Depletion during CD20 Immunotherapy in Mice

David J. DiLillo; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Yoshihiro Ueda; Kaiyong Yang; Junji Uchida; Karen M. Haas; Garnett Kelsoe; Thomas F. Tedder

CD20 mAb-mediated B cell depletion is an effective treatment for B cell malignancies and some autoimmune diseases. However, the full effects of B cell depletion on natural, primary, and secondary Ab responses and the maintenance of Ag-specific serum Ig levels are largely unknown. The relationship between memory B cells, long-lived plasma cells, and long-lived humoral immunity also remains controversial. To address the roles of B cell subsets in the longevity of humoral responses, mature B cells were depleted in mice using CD20 mAb. Peritoneal B cell depletion reduced natural and Ag-induced IgM responses. Otherwise, CD20+ B cell depletion prevented humoral immune responses and class switching and depleted existing and adoptively transferred B cell memory. Nonetheless, B cell depletion did not affect serum Ig levels, Ag-specific Ab titers, or bone marrow Ab-secreting plasma cell numbers. Coblockade of LFA-1 and VLA-4 adhesion molecules temporarily depleted long-lived plasma cells from the bone marrow. CD20+ B cell depletion plus LFA-1/VLA-4 mAb treatment significantly prolonged Ag-specific plasma cell depletion from the bone marrow, with a significant decrease in Ag-specific serum IgG. Collectively, these results support previous claims that bone marrow plasma cells are intrinsically long-lived. Furthermore, these studies now demonstrate that mature and memory B cells are not required for maintaining bone marrow plasma cell numbers, but are required for repopulation of plasma cell-deficient bone marrow. Thereby, depleting mature and memory B cells does not have a dramatic negative effect on preexisting Ab levels.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

The Peritoneal Cavity Provides a Protective Niche for B1 and Conventional B Lymphocytes during Anti-CD20 Immunotherapy in Mice

Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Junji Uchida; Derek W. Cain; Guglielmo M. Venturi; Jonathan C. Poe; Karen M. Haas; Thomas F. Tedder

Although anti-CD20 immunotherapy effectively treats human lymphoma and autoimmune disease, the in vivo effect of immunotherapy on tissue B cells and their subsets is generally unknown. To address this, anti-mouse CD20 mAbs were used in a mouse model in which the extent and kinetics of tissue B cell depletion could be assessed in vivo. CD20 mAb treatment depleted most mature B cells within 2 days, with 95–98% of B cells in the bone marrow, blood, spleen, lymph nodes, and gut-associated lymphoid tissues depleted by day 7, including marginal zone and follicular B cells. The few spleen B cells remaining after CD20 mAb treatment included pre-B, immature, transitional, and some B1 B cells that expressed CD20 at low levels. By contrast, peritoneal cavity B cells expressed normal CD20 densities and were coated with CD20 mAb, but only 30–43% of B1 cells and 43–78% of B2 cells were depleted by day 7. Spleen B cells adoptively transferred into the peritoneal cavity were similarly resistant to mAb-induced depletion, while transferred B cells that had migrated to the spleen were depleted. However, peritoneal B1 and B2 cells were effectively depleted in mAb-treated wild-type and C3-deficient mice by thioglycolate-induced monocyte migration into this otherwise privileged niche. Inflammation-elicited effector cells did not promote peritoneal cavity B cell depletion in FcR-deficient mice treated with CD20 mAb. Thus, the majority of CD20+ cells and B cell subsets within lymphoid tissues and the peritoneum could be depleted efficiently in vivo through Fc-dependent, but C-independent pathways during anti-CD20 immunotherapy.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

B Lymphocyte Depletion by CD20 Monoclonal Antibody Prevents Diabetes in Nonobese Diabetic Mice despite Isotype-Specific Differences in FcγR Effector Functions

Yan Xiu; Carmen P. Wong; Jean David Bouaziz; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Yaming Wang; Shannon M. Pop; Roland Tisch; Thomas F. Tedder

NOD mice deficient for B lymphocytes from birth fail to develop autoimmune or type 1 diabetes. To assess whether B cell depletion influences type 1 diabetes in mice with an intact immune system, NOD female mice representing early and late preclinical stages of disease were treated with mouse anti-mouse CD20 mAbs. Short-term CD20 mAb treatment in 5-wk-old NOD female mice reduced B cell numbers by ∼95%, decreased subsequent insulitis, and prevented diabetes in >60% of littermates. In addition, CD20 mAb treatment of 15-wk-old NOD female mice significantly delayed, but did not prevent, diabetes onset. Protection from diabetes did not result from altered T cell numbers or subset distributions, or regulatory/suppressor T cell generation. Rather, impaired CD4+ and CD8+ T cell activation in the lymph nodes of B cell-depleted NOD mice may delay diabetes onset. B cell depletion was achieved despite reduced sensitivity of NOD mice to CD20 mAbs compared with C57BL/6 mice. Decreased B cell depletion resulted from deficient FcγRI binding of IgG2a/c CD20 mAbs and 60% reduced spleen monocyte numbers, which in combination reduced Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. With high-dose CD20 mAb treatment (250 μg) in NOD mice, FcγRIII and FcγRIV compensated for inadequate FcγRI function and mediated B cell depletion. Thereby, NOD mice provide a model for human FcγR polymorphisms that reduce therapeutic mAb efficacy in vivo. Moreover, this study defines a new, clinically relevant approach whereby B cell depletion early in the course of disease development may prevent diabetes or delay progression of disease.


Blood | 2008

Lymphoma depletion during CD20 immunotherapy in mice is mediated by macrophage FcγRI, FcγRIII, and FcγRIV

Veronique Minard-Colin; Yan Xiu; Jonathan C. Poe; Mayuka Horikawa; Cynthia M. Magro; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Karen M. Haas; Thomas F. Tedder

Despite the demonstrated clinical efficacy of CD20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) for lymphoma therapy, the in vivo mechanisms of tumor depletion remain controversial and variable. To identify the molecular mechanisms responsible for lymphoma killing by CD20 mAb in a homologous system amenable to mechanistic studies and genetic manipulation, a mouse lymphoma model was developed using primary tumor cells from a C57BL/6 Emicro-cMyc transgenic mouse and mouse antimouse CD20 mAbs. CD20 mAb treatment of syngeneic mice with adoptively transferred lymphomas prevented tumor development or significantly prolonged mouse survival depending on tumor volume, mAb dose, and treatment timing. Cooperative FcgammaRIV, FcgammaRIII, and FcgammaRI interactions mediated optimal lymphoma depletion by CD20 mAb in vivo, whereas clodronate-mediated depletion of macrophages eliminated the therapeutic benefit of CD20 mAb. Although CD20 mAbs activated complement in vitro and in vivo, normal and malignant B-cell depletion was induced through C1q- and C3-independent mechanisms. Thus, the ability of CD20 mAbs to deplete malignant B cells in vivo required FcgammaR-dependent use of the innate mononuclear cell immune system. These findings allow for mechanism-based predictions of the biologic outcome of CD20 mAb therapy and treatment optimization.


American Journal of Pathology | 2006

B-Lymphocyte Depletion Reduces Skin Fibrosis and Autoimmunity in the Tight-Skin Mouse Model for Systemic Sclerosis

Minoru Hasegawa; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Koichi Yanaba; Jean-David Bouaziz; Junji Uchida; Manabu Fujimoto; Takashi Matsushita; Yukiyo Matsushita; Mayuka Horikawa; Kazuhiro Komura; Kazuhiko Takehara; Shinichi Sato; Thomas F. Tedder


Archive | 2004

Cd-20 specific antibodies and methods of employing same

Thomas F. Tedder; Junji Uchida; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Jonathan C. Poe


Archive | 2006

Anti-cd19 antibodies and uses in oncology

Thomas F. Tedder; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Hanne Gron; Norihito Yazawa


Archive | 2006

Anti-cd19 antibody therapy for autoimmune disease

Thomas F. Tedder; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Hanne Gron; Norihito Yazawa


Archive | 2010

Anti-CD19 antibodies and uses in B cell disorders

Thomas F. Tedder; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Hanne Gron; Norihito Yazawa


Skin Cancer | 2017

Two cases of primary malignant melanoma of the esophagus

Kyosuke Oishi; Kie Mizumaki; Kaori Sawada; Yuka Ikawa; Shintaro Maeda; Yasuhito Hamaguchi; Okamoto K; Itasu Ninomiya; Tadaaki Yamada; Kazuhiko Takehara

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Thomas F. Tedder

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