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Dive into the research topics where Yu-Chang Bryan Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Yu-Chang Bryan Wu.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2011

The Relationship between CD27 Negative and Positive B Cell Populations in Human Peripheral Blood

Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; David Kipling; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters

CD27 expression has been used to distinguish between memory and naive B cells in humans. However, low levels of mutated and isotype-switched CD27−IgD− cells are seen in healthy adults, and these are increased in some autoimmune diseases and in the elderly. Thus CD27 is not a universal marker of memory B cells in humans. Various hypotheses have been put forward as to the function of the CD27− memory population. Since we have previously found high-throughput IGHV repertoire analysis useful to distinguish “innate-like” memory B cells (CD27+IgD+), we have employed similar analyses to elucidate the relationship between CD27− and CD27+ memory B cells. IgM+IgD− memory cells in both the CD27+ and CD27− compartments share the unique characteristics of the “innate-like” IgM+IgD+CD27+ cells. The switched CD27+ and CD27− memory cells share a similar IGHV repertoire, having more in common with each other than with “innate-like” memory cells, although it is interesting that IgG2 and IgA2 subclasses of antibody in both switched memory populations have a more “innate-like” repertoire. Clonality analysis shows evidence of a close clonal relationship between the two populations in that both CD27− and CD27+ switched memory cells can be found in the same genealogical tree. The expression of CD27 does not appear to occur in a linear developmental fashion, since we see CD27− cells as precursors of CD27+ cells and vice versa. Despite the similarities, the CDR-H3 repertoire of the CD27− cells is significantly different from both the CD27+IgD+ and CD27+IgD− populations, indicating that perhaps the lack of CD27 might be related to binding properties of the Ig CDR-H3 region.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2012

Age-related changes in human peripheral blood IGH repertoire following vaccination

Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; David Kipling; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters

Immune protection against pulmonary infections, such as seasonal flu and invasive pneumonia, is severely attenuated with age, and vaccination regimes for the elderly people often fail to elicit effective immune response. We have previously shown that influenza and pneumococcal vaccine responses in the older population are significantly impaired in terms of serum antibody production, and have shown repertoire differences by CDR-H3 spectratype analysis. Here we report a detailed analysis of the B cell repertoire in response to vaccine, including a breakdown of sequences by class and subclass. Clustering analysis of high-throughput sequencing data enables us to visualize the response in terms of expansions of clonotypes, changes in CDR-H3 characteristics, and somatic hypermutation as well as identifying the commonly used IGH genes. We have highlighted a number of significant age-related changes in the B cell repertoire. Interestingly, in light of the fact that IgG is the most prevalent serum antibody and the most widely used as a correlate of protection, the most striking age-related differences are in the IgA response, with defects also seen in the IgM repertoire. In addition there is a skewing toward IgG2 in the IgG sequences of the older samples at all time points. This analysis illustrates the importance of antibody classes other than IgG and has highlighted a number of areas for future consideration in vaccine studies of the elderly.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2015

Ageing of the B cell repertoire

Victoria Martin; Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; David Kipling; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters

Older people are more susceptible to infection, less responsive to vaccination and have a more inflammatory immune environment. Using spectratype analysis, we have previously shown that the B-cell repertoire of older people shows evidence of inappropriate clonal expansions in the absence of challenge, and that this loss of B-cell diversity correlates with poor health. Studies on response to vaccination, using both spectratyping and high-throughput sequencing of the repertoire, indicate that older responses to challenge are lacking in magnitude and/or delayed significantly. Also that some of the biologically significant differences may be in different classes of antibody. We have also previously shown that normal young B-cell repertoires can vary between different phenotypic subsets of B cells. In this paper, we present an analysis of immunoglobulin repertoire in different subclasses of antibody in five different populations of B cell, and show how the repertoire in these different groups changes with age. Although some age-related repertoire differences occur in naive cells, before exogenous antigen exposure, we see indications that there is a general dysregulation of the selective forces that shape memory B-cell populations in older people.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2016

Transitional B cells in early human B cell development - time to revisit the paradigm?

Victoria Martin; Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; Catherine Townsend; Grace Lu; Joselli Silva O'Hare; Alexander Mozeika; Anthonius C C Coolen; David Kipling; Franca Fraternali; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters

The B cell repertoire is generated in the adult bone marrow by an ordered series of gene rearrangement processes that result in massive diversity of immunoglobulin (Ig) genes and consequently an equally large number of potential specificities for antigen. As the process is essentially random, the cells exhibiting excess reactivity with self-antigens are generated and need to be removed from the repertoire before the cells are fully mature. Some of the cells are deleted, and some will undergo receptor editing to see if changing the light chain can rescue an autoreactive antibody. As a consequence, the binding properties of the B cell receptor are changed as development progresses through pre-B ≫ immature ≫ transitional ≫ naïve phenotypes. Using long-read, high-throughput, sequencing we have produced a unique set of sequences from these four cell types in human bone marrow and matched peripheral blood, and our results describe the effects of tolerance selection on the B cell repertoire at the Ig gene level. Most strong effects of selection are seen within the heavy chain repertoire and can be seen both in gene usage and in CDRH3 characteristics. Age-related changes are small, and only the size of the CDRH3 shows constant and significant change in these data. The paucity of significant changes in either kappa or lambda light chain repertoires implies that either the heavy chain has more influence over autoreactivity than light chain and/or that switching between kappa and lambda light chains, as opposed to switching within the light chain loci, may effect a more successful autoreactive rescue by receptor editing. Our results show that the transitional cell population contains cells other than those that are part of the pre-B ≫ immature ≫ transitional ≫ naïve development pathway, since the population often shows a repertoire that is outside the trajectory of gene loss/gain between pre-B and naïve stages.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

Antibodies and superantibodies in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps

Jiun Bo Chen; Louisa K. James; Anna M. Davies; Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; Joanne Rimmer; Valerie J. Lund; Jou Han Chen; James M. McDonnell; Yih-Chih Chan; George H. Hutchins; Tse Wen Chang; Brian J. Sutton; Harsha H. Kariyawasam; Hannah J. Gould

Background: Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps is associated with local immunoglobulin hyperproduction and the presence of IgE antibodies against Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins (SAEs). Aspirin‐exacerbated respiratory disease is a severe form of chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps in which nearly all patients express anti‐SAEs. Objectives: We aimed to understand antibodies reactive to SAEs and determine whether they recognize SAEs through their complementarity‐determining regions (CDRs) or framework regions. Methods: Labeled staphylococcal enterotoxin (SE) A, SED, and SEE were used to isolate single SAE‐specific B cells from the nasal polyps of 3 patients with aspirin‐exacerbated respiratory disease by using fluorescence‐activated cell sorting. Recombinant antibodies with “matched” heavy and light chains were cloned as IgG1, and those of high affinity for specific SAEs, assayed by means of ELISA and surface plasmon resonance, were recloned as IgE and antigen‐binding fragments. IgE activities were tested in basophil degranulation assays. Results: Thirty‐seven SAE‐specific, IgG‐ or IgA‐expressing B cells were isolated and yielded 6 anti‐SAE clones, 2 each for SEA, SED, and SEE. Competition binding assays revealed that the anti‐SEE antibodies recognize nonoverlapping epitopes in SEE. Unexpectedly, each anti‐SEE mediated SEE‐induced basophil degranulation, and IgG1 or antigen‐binding fragments of each anti‐SEE enhanced degranulation by the other anti‐SEE. Conclusions: SEEs can activate basophils by simultaneously binding as antigens in the conventional manner to CDRs and as superantigens to framework regions of anti‐SEE IgE in anti‐SEE IgE‐Fc&egr;RI complexes. Anti‐SEE IgG1s can enhance the activity of anti‐SEE IgEs as conventional antibodies through CDRs or simultaneously as conventional antibodies and as “superantibodies” through CDRs and framework regions to SEEs in SEE–anti‐SEE IgE‐Fc&egr;RI complexes.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Assessment of B Cell Repertoire in Humans.

Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; David Kipling; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters

The B cell receptor (BCR) repertoire is highly diverse. Repertoire diversity is achieved centrally by somatic recombination of immunoglobulin (Ig) genes and peripherally by somatic hypermutation and Ig heavy chain class-switching. Throughout these processes, there is selection for functional gene rearrangements, selection against gene combinations resulting in self-reactive BCRs, and selection for BCRs with high affinity for exogenous antigens after challenge. Hence, investigation of BCR repertoires from different groups of B cells can provide information on stages of B cell development and shed light on the etiology of B cell pathologies. In most instances, the third complementarity determining region of the Ig heavy chain (CDR-H3) contributes the majority of amino acids to the antibody/antigen binding interface. Although CDR-H3 spectratype analysis provides information on the overall diversity of BCR repertoires, this fairly simple technique analyzes the relative quantities of CDR-H3 regions of each size, within a range of approximately 10-80 bp, without sequence detail and thus is limited in scope. High-throughput sequencing (HTS) techniques on the Roche 454 GS FLX Titanium system, however, can generate a wide coverage of Ig sequences to provide more qualitative data such as V, D, and J usage as well as detailed CDR3 sequence information. Here we present protocols in detail for CDR-H3 spectratype analysis and HTS of human BCR repertoires.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2016

Significant differences in physicochemical properties of human immunoglobulin kappa and lambda CDR3 regions

Catherine Townsend; Julie M.J. Laffy; Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; Joselli Silva O’Hare; Victoria Martin; David Kipling; Franca Fraternali; Deborah K. Dunn-Walters

Antibody variable regions are composed of a heavy and a light chain, and in humans, there are two light chain isotypes: kappa and lambda. Despite their importance in receptor editing, the light chain is often overlooked in the antibody literature, with the focus being on the heavy chain complementarity-determining region (CDR)-H3 region. In this paper, we set out to investigate the physicochemical and structural differences between human kappa and lambda light chain CDR regions. We constructed a dataset containing over 29,000 light chain variable region sequences from IgM-transcribing, newly formed B cells isolated from human bone marrow and peripheral blood. We also used a published human naïve dataset to investigate the CDR-H3 properties of heavy chains paired with kappa and lambda light chains and probed the Protein Data Bank to investigate the structural differences between kappa and lambda antibody CDR regions. We found that kappa and lambda light chains have very different CDR physicochemical and structural properties, whereas the heavy chains with which they are paired do not differ significantly. We also observed that the mean CDR3 N nucleotide addition in the kappa, lambda, and heavy chain gene rearrangements are correlated within donors but can differ between donors. This indicates that terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase may work with differing efficiencies between different people but the same efficiency in the different classes of immunoglobulin chain within one person. We have observed large differences in the physicochemical and structural properties of kappa and lambda light chain CDR regions. This may reflect different roles in the humoral immune response.


International Immunology | 2018

IgE repertoire and immunological memory: compartmental regulation and antibody function

Hannah J. Gould; Yu-Chang Bryan Wu

Abstract It is now generally recognized that bone marrow is the survival niche for antigen-specific plasma cells with long-term immunological memory. These cells release antibodies into the circulation, needed to prime effector cells in the secondary immune response. These antibodies participate in the surveillance for antigen and afford immune defence against pathogens and toxins previously encountered in the primary immune response. IgE antibodies function together with their effector cells, mast cells, to exert ‘immediate hypersensitivity’ in mucosal tissues at the front line of immune defence. The constant supply of IgE antibodies from bone marrow plasma cells allows the rapid ‘recall response’ by mast cells upon re-exposure to antigen even after periods of antigen absence. The speed and sensitivity of the IgE recall response and potency of the effector cell functions are advantageous in the early detection and elimination of pathogens and toxins at the sites of attack. Local antigen provocation also stimulates de novo synthesis of IgE or its precursors of other isotypes that undergo IgE switching in the mucosa. This process, however, introduces a delay before mast cells can be sensitized and resume activity; this is terminated shortly after the antigen is eliminated. Recent results from adaptive immune receptor repertoire sequencing of immunoglobulin genes suggest that the mucosal IgE+ plasmablasts, which have undergone affinity maturation in the course of their evolution in vivo, are a source of long-lived IgE+ plasma cells in the bone marrow that are already fully functional.


Nature Communications | 2018

Spatiotemporal segregation of human marginal zone and memory B cell populations in lymphoid tissue

Yuan Zhao; Mohamed Uduman; Jacqueline H. Y. Siu; Thomas J. Tull; Jeremy Sanderson; Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; Julian Q. Zhou; Nedyalko Petrov; Richard Ellis; Katrina Todd; Konstantia-Maria Chavele; William Guesdon; Anna Vossenkämper; Wayel Jassem; David D’Cruz; David J. Fear; Susan John; Dagmar Scheel-Toellner; Claire Hopkins; Estefania Moreno; Natalie Woodman; Francesca D. Ciccarelli; Susanne Heck; Steven H. Kleinstein; Mats Bemark; Jo Spencer

Human memory B cells and marginal zone (MZ) B cells share common features such as the expression of CD27 and somatic mutations in their IGHV and BCL6 genes, but the relationship between them is controversial. Here, we show phenotypic progression within lymphoid tissues as MZ B cells emerge from the mature naïve B cell pool via a precursor CD27−CD45RBMEM55+ population distant from memory cells. By imaging mass cytometry, we find that MZ B cells and memory B cells occupy different microanatomical niches in organised gut lymphoid tissues. Both populations disseminate widely between distant lymphoid tissues and blood, and both diversify their IGHV repertoire in gut germinal centres (GC), but nevertheless remain largely clonally separate. MZ B cells are therefore not developmentally contiguous with or analogous to classical memory B cells despite their shared ability to transit through GC, where somatic mutations are acquired.Human memory and marginal zone B cells share some features including CD27 expression and somatic hypermutation, but their lineage relationship is still unclear. Here the authors use mass cytometry and sequential clustering methods to show that, despite their shared features, memory and marginal zone B cells represent distinct lineage choices.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

Insight into Rhinovirus-Induced Asthma Exacerbation Using High-Throughput Immunosequencing of B-Cell Repertoires

Yu-Chang Bryan Wu; Aaron M. Rosenfeld; Nadine Upton; Jaideep Dhariwal; Uri Hershberg; David Kipling; Sebastian L. Johnston; Hannah J. Gould

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Anna Vossenkämper

Queen Mary University of London

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