15 research outputs found

    Regulation of hyphal growth and sporulation of the insect pathogenic fungus Entomophthora thripidum in vitro

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    Entomophthora thripidum is an obligate biotrophic insect pathogenic fungus that grows as protoplasts within the hemocoel of thrips. Prior to penetration through the insect cuticle and spore formation at the insect surface the protoplasts switch to hyphal growth. In vitro, the differentiation to hyphal growth was a prerequisite for the subsequent formation of infectious spores and was detected 10-20 days after inoculation. E. thripidum secreted a factor that autoinduced the differentiation to hyphal growth. The discovery of this activity inducing hyphal growth made possible the reliable production of spores, the infection of host insects and the consecutive re-isolation of the fungus from the infected insect

    Regulation of hyphal growth and sporulation of the insect pathogenic fungus Entomophthora thripidum in vitro

    Get PDF
    Entomophthora thripidum is an obligate biotrophic insect pathogenic fungus that grows as protoplasts within the hemocoel of thrips. Prior to penetration through the insect cuticle and spore formation at the insect surface the protoplasts switch to hyphal growth. In vitro, the differentiation to hyphal growth was a prerequisite for the subsequent formation of infectious spores and was detected 10-20 days after inoculation. E. thripidum secreted a factor that autoinduced the differentiation to hyphal growth. The discovery of this activity inducing hyphal growth made possible the reliable production of spores, the infection of host insects and the consecutive re-isolation of the fungus from the infected insect

    Sustained in vivo signaling by long-lived IL-2 induces prolonged increases of regulatory T cells.

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    Regulatory T cells (Tregs) expressing FOXP3 are essential for the maintenance of self-tolerance and are deficient in many common autoimmune diseases. Immune tolerance is maintained in part by IL-2 and deficiencies in the IL-2 pathway cause reduced Treg function and an increased risk of autoimmunity. Recent studies expanding Tregs in vivo with low-dose IL-2 achieved major clinical successes highlighting the potential to optimize this pleiotropic cytokine for inflammatory and autoimmune disease indications. Here we compare the clinically approved IL-2 molecule, Proleukin, with two engineered IL-2 molecules with long half-lives owing to their fusion in monovalent and bivalent stoichiometry to a non-FcRγ binding human IgG1. Using nonhuman primates, we demonstrate that single ultra-low doses of IL-2 fusion proteins induce a prolonged state of in vivo activation that increases Tregs for an extended period of time similar to multiple-dose Proleukin. One of the common pleiotropic effects of high dose IL-2 treatment, eosinophilia, is eliminated at doses of the IL-2 fusion proteins that greatly expand Tregs. The long half-lives of the IL-2 fusion proteins facilitated a detailed characterization of an IL-2 dose response driving Treg expansion that correlates with increasingly sustained, suprathreshold pSTAT5a induction and subsequent sustained increases in the expression of CD25, FOXP3 and Ki-67 with retention of Treg-specific epigenetic signatures at FOXP3 and CTLA4.This work was supported by Wellcome Trust Grant 091157, JDRF International Grant 9-2011-253, the National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, and the Medical Research Council Cusrow Wadia Fund. The Cambridge Institute for Medical Research (CIMR) is in receipt of a Wellcome Trust Strategic Award (100140). U.M.N. was the recipient of a Hoffmann-La Roche postdoctoral fellowship.This is thefinal version. It was first published by Elsevier at http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S089684111400146

    Pharmacokinetic properties of radiolabeled mutant Interleukin-2v:a PET imaging study

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    Interleukin-2 (IL2) is a cytokine that can stimulate cytotoxic immune cells to attack infected and malignant cells. Unfortunately, IL2 can also cause serious immune-related toxicity. Recently, a mutant of IL2 (IL2v) with abolished CD25 binding, increased plasma half-life and less toxicity was engineered. Unlike wild-type IL2 (wt-IL2), mutant IL2v does not bind to the α-subunit (CD25) of the high affinity IL2αβγ receptor, but only to its β and γ subunit. Here, we investigated the biological properties of IL2v and compared with the wt-IL2 using fluorine-18 and PET. [18F]FB-IL2v binds specifically to IL2 receptors (IL2R) on activated human peripheral blood monocytes (hPBMCs) and is cleared mainly by the kidneys (Balb/c mice). [18F]FB-IL2v PET studies in SCID mice injected with hPBMCs revealed high uptake in the implant (0.85 ± 0.15 SUV), which was significantly reduced after pretreatment with wt-IL2 or mutant IL2v (SUV 0.26 ± 0.1 and 0.46 ± 0.1,p< 0.01). Compartment modeling and Logan graphical analysis in wistar rats inoculated with hPBMCs indicated that the binding of [18F]FB-IL2v to IL2R was reversible. The volume of distribution (VT) and the non-displaceable binding potential (BPnd) of mutant [18F]FB-IL2v in the implant were approximately 3 times lower than those of wild-type [18F]FB-IL2 (p< 0.01). Pretreatment with wt-IL2 significantly reduced the VTand BPnd of mutant [18F]FB-IL2v in the implant (p< 0.001). This demonstrates that wild-type [18F]FB-IL2 binds stronger to IL2R and has faster kinetics than [18F]FB-IL2v, which makes it less suitable as a therapeutic drug. [18F]FB-IL2v, on the other hand, seems to have better properties for use as a therapeutic drug

    Functional analysis of the extracellular cysteine residues in the human organic anion transporting polypeptide, OATP2B1

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    Organic anion transporting polypeptide (OATP) superfamily member 2B1 (OATP2B1) mediates the uptake of steroid hormone precursors and selected drugs in the placenta, liver, mammary gland, brain, and intestine. This action is modulated by sulfhydryl reagents. Common to all OATPs is a large extracellular loop between transmembrane domains IX and X with 10 conserved cysteines. To elucidate the structure-function relationship of this cysteine rich ectodomain, a truncated OATP2B1 lacking 10 extracellular cysteines (OATP2B1(Delta489-557)) and 10 OATP2B1 mutants containing individual Cys-to-Ala substitutions were generated and expressed in CHO-K1 cells. The immunolocalization, cell-surface expression, transport activity, and free cysteine labeling with N-biotinoylaminoethylmethane-thiosulfonate of mutant proteins and wild-type OATP2B1 were compared. OATP2B1(Delta489-557) accumulated intracellularly. Nine Cys-to-Ala substitutions, C489A, C495A, C504A, C516A, C520A, C539A, C541A, C553A, and C557A, were misprocessed, appearing predominantly as core-glycosylated, 60-kDa proteins and as 180-kDa complexes. Only C493A was a fully glycosylated 75-kDa protein expressed at the cell surface. Thapsigargin partially corrected the misprocessing of mutants. Compared with OATP2B1, C493A and C557A transported estrone-3-sulfate and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate less efficiently, whereas all other mutants were functionally impaired. MTSEA labeled free cysteines in all Cys-to-Ala mutants but not in OATP2B1, suggesting that all 10 extracellular cysteines are normally disulfide-bonded. Our findings show that the trafficking and function of OATP2B1 is vulnerable to changes in the cysteine residues of extracellular loop IX-X

    in vivo fluorescence imaging of the activity of CEA TCB, a novel t-cell bispecific antibody, reveals highly specific tumor targeting and fast induction of t-cell-mediated tumor killing

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    PURPOSE CEA TCB (RG7802, RO6958688) is a novel T-cell bispecific antibody, engaging CD3ε upon binding to carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) on tumor cells. Containing an engineered Fc region, conferring an extended blood half-life while preventing side effects due to activation of innate effector cells, CEA TCB potently induces tumor lysis in mouse tumors. Here we aimed to characterize the pharmacokinetic profile, the biodistribution, and the mode of action of CEA TCB by combining in vitro and in vivo fluorescence imaging readouts. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN CEA-expressing tumor cells (LS174T) and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were cocultured in vitro or cografted into immunocompromised mice. Fluorescence reflectance imaging and intravital 2-photon (2P) microscopy were employed to analyze in vivo tumor targeting while in vitro confocal and intravital time-lapse imaging were used to assess the mode of action of CEA TCB. RESULTS Fluorescence reflectance imaging revealed increased ratios of extravascular to vascular fluorescence signals in tumors after treatment with CEA TCB compared with control antibody, suggesting specific targeting, which was confirmed by intravital microscopy. Confocal and intravital 2P microscopy showed CEA TCB to accelerate T-cell-dependent tumor cell lysis by inducing a local increase of effector to tumor cell ratios and stable crosslinking of multiple T cells to individual tumor cells. CONCLUSIONS Using optical imaging, we demonstrate specific tumor targeting and characterize the mode of CEA TCB-mediated target cell lysis in a mouse tumor model, which supports further clinical evaluation of CEA TCB
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