48 results on '"Geretz A"'
Search Results
2. AP-1/c-Fos supports SIV and HIV-1 latency in CD4 T cells infected in vivo
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Viviana Cobos Jiménez, Aviva Geretz, Andrey Tokarev, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Selase Deletsu, Kawthar Machmach, Prakriti Mudvari, J. Natalie Howard, Amanda Zelkoski, Dominic Paquin-Proulx, Gregory Q. Del Prete, Caroline Subra, Eli A. Boritz, Alberto Bosque, Rasmi Thomas, and Diane L. Bolton
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Molecular biology ,Immunology ,Microbiology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Persistent HIV-1 reservoirs of infected CD4 T cells are a major barrier to HIV-1 cure, although the mechanisms by which they are established and maintained in vivo remain poorly characterized. To elucidate host cell gene expression patterns that govern virus gene expression, we analyzed viral RNA+ (vRNA) CD4 T cells of untreated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected macaques by single-cell RNA sequencing. A subset of vRNA+ cells distinguished by spliced and high total vRNA (7–10% of reads) expressed diminished FOS, a component of the Activator protein 1 (AP-1) transcription factor, relative to vRNA-low and -negative cells. Conversely, FOS and JUN, another AP-1 component, were upregulated in HIV DNA+ infected cells compared to uninfected cells from people with HIV-1 on suppressive therapy. Inhibiting c-Fos in latently infected primary cells augmented reactivatable HIV-1 infection. These findings implicate AP-1 in latency establishment and maintenance and as a potential therapeutic target to limit HIV-1 reservoirs.
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- 2023
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3. Quality control project of NGS HLA genotyping for the 17th International HLA and Immunogenetics Workshop.
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Osoegawa, Kazutoyo, Vayntrub, Tamara A, Wenda, Sabine, De Santis, Dianne, Barsakis, Konstantinos, Ivanova, Milena, Hsu, Susan, Barone, Jonathan, Holdsworth, Rhonda, Diviney, Mary, Askar, Medhat, Willis, Amanda, Railton, Dawn, Laflin, Sophie, Gendzekhadze, Ketevan, Oki, Arisa, Sacchi, Nicoletta, Mazzocco, Michela, Andreani, Marco, Ameen, Reem, Stavropoulos-Giokas, Catherine, Dinou, Amalia, Torres, Margareth, Dos Santos Francisco, Rodrigo, Serra-Pages, Carles, Goodridge, Damian, Balladares, Sandra, Bettinotti, Maria P, Iglehart, Brian, Kashi, Zahra, Martin, Russell, Saw, Chee Loong, Ragoussis, Jiannis, Downing, Jonathan, Navarrete, Cristina, Chong, Winnie, Saito, Katsuyuki, Petrek, Martin, Tokic, Stana, Padros, Karin, Beatriz Rodriguez, Ma, Zakharova, Viktoria, Shragina, Olga, Marino, Susana R, Brown, Nicholas K, Shiina, Takashi, Suzuki, Shingo, Spierings, Eric, Zhang, Qiuheng, Yin, Yuxin, Morris, Gerald P, Hernandez, Ana, Ruiz, Phillip, Khor, Seik-Soon, Tokunaga, Katsushi, Geretz, Aviva, Thomas, Rasmi, Yamamoto, Fumiko, Mallempati, Kalyan C, Gangavarapu, Sridevi, Kanga, Uma, Tyagi, Shweta, Marsh, Steven GE, Bultitude, Will P, Liu, Xiangjun, Cao, Dajiang, Penning, Maarten, Hurley, Carolyn K, Cesbron, Anne, Mueller, Claudia, Mytilineos, Joannis, Weimer, Eric T, Bengtsson, Mats, Fischer, Gottfried, Hansen, John A, Chang, Chia-Jung, Mack, Steven J, Creary, Lisa E, and Fernandez-Viña, Marcelo A
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Humans ,HLA Antigens ,Histocompatibility Testing ,Pilot Projects ,Immunogenetics ,Genotype ,Alleles ,International Cooperation ,Quality Control ,Software ,Consensus Development Conferences as Topic ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,NGS HLA typing ,Proficiency testing ,Quality control ,Reference cell panel ,Genetics ,Immunology - Abstract
The 17th International HLA and Immunogenetics Workshop (IHIW) organizers conducted a Pilot Study (PS) in which 13 laboratories (15 groups) participated to assess the performance of the various sequencing library preparation protocols, NGS platforms and software in use prior to the workshop. The organizers sent 50 cell lines to each of the 15 groups, scored the 15 independently generated sets of NGS HLA genotyping data, and generated "consensus" HLA genotypes for each of the 50 cell lines. Proficiency Testing (PT) was subsequently organized using four sets of 24 cell lines, selected from 48 of 50 PS cell lines, to validate the quality of NGS HLA typing data from the 34 participating IHIW laboratories. Completion of the PT program with a minimum score of 95% concordance at the HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 loci satisfied the requirements to submit NGS HLA typing data for the 17th IHIW projects. Together, these PS and PT efforts constituted the 17th IHIW Quality Control project. Overall PT concordance rates for HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, HLA-DPA1, HLA-DPB1, HLA-DQA1, HLA-DQB1, HLA-DRB1, HLA-DRB3, HLA-DRB4 and HLA-DRB5 were 98.1%, 97.0% and 98.1%, 99.0%, 98.6%, 98.8%, 97.6%, 96.0%, 99.1%, 90.0% and 91.7%, respectively. Across all loci, the majority of the discordance was due to allele dropout. The high cost of NGS HLA genotyping per experiment likely prevented the retyping of initially failed HLA loci. Despite the high HLA genotype concordance rates of the software, there remains room for improvement in the assembly of more accurate consensus DNA sequences by NGS HLA genotyping software.
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- 2019
4. PP 7.6 – 00036 Single cell transcriptomics identifies PTMA as a host gene that inhibits HIV during acute infection in vivo
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A. Geretz, P.K. Ehrenberg, R. Clifford, A. Laliberte, C. Prelli Bozzo, S. Shangguan, M. Rolland, N. Phanuphak, R. Apps, M. Robb, J.A. Ake, S. Vasan, D. Hsu, B. Hahn, F. Kirchhoff, and R. Thomas
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2022
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5. Long-term antiretroviral therapy initiated in acute HIV infection prevents residual dysfunction of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells
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Hiroshi Takata, Juyeon C. Kakazu, Julie L. Mitchell, Eugene Kroon, Donn J. Colby, Carlo Sacdalan, Hongjun Bai, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Aviva Geretz, Supranee Buranapraditkun, Suteeraporn Pinyakorn, Jintana Intasan, Somporn Tipsuk, Duanghathai Suttichom, Peeriya Prueksakaew, Thep Chalermchai, Nitiya Chomchey, Nittaya Phanuphak, Mark de Souza, Nelson L. Michael, Merlin L. Robb, Elias K. Haddad, Trevor A Crowell, Sandhya Vasan, Victor G. Valcour, Daniel C. Douek, Rasmi Thomas, Morgane Rolland, Nicolas Chomont, Jintanat Ananworanich, Lydie Trautmann, Nipat Teeratakulpisarn, Supanit Pattanachaiwit, Somchai Sriplienchan, Ponpen Tantivitayakul, Ratchapong Kanaprach, Kiat Ruxrungtham, Netsiri Dumrongpisutikul, Ponlapat Rojnuckarin, Suthat Chottanapund, Kultida Poltavee, Tassanee Luekasemsuk, Hathairat Savadsuk, Suwanna Puttamsawin, Khunthalee Benjapornpong, Nisakorn Ratnaratorn, Kamonkan Tangnaree, Chutharat Munkong, Rommanus Thaimanee, Patcharin Eamyoung, Sasiwimol Ubolyam, Sukalya Lerdlum, Sopark Manasnayakorn, Rugsun Rerknimitr, Sunee Sirivichayakul, Phandee Wattanaboonyongcharoen, Jessica Cowden, Alexandra Schuetz, Siriwat Akapirat, Nampueng Churikanont, Saowanit Getchalarat, Denise Hsu, Ellen Turk, Oratai Butterworth, Mark Milazzo, Leigh Anne Eller, Julie Ake, Serena Spudich, CAPT Lawrence Fox, Silvia Ratto-Kim, Victor DeGruttola, Yotin Chinvarun, Pasiri Sithinamsuwan, James Fletcher, and Bruce Shiramizu
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HIV ,Antiretroviral therapy ,CD8 T cells ,Cell differentiation ,TCF-1 ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Harnessing CD8+ T cell responses is being explored to achieve HIV remission. Although HIV-specific CD8+ T cells become dysfunctional without treatment, antiretroviral therapy (ART) partially restores their function. However, the extent of this recovery under long-term ART is less understood. Methods: We analyzed the differentiation status and function of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells after long-term ART initiated in acute or chronic HIV infection ex vivo and upon in vitro recall. Findings: ART initiation in any stage of acute HIV infection promoted the persistence of long-lived HIV-specific CD8+ T cells with high expansion (P
- Published
- 2022
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6. Potent Zika and dengue cross-neutralizing antibodies induced by Zika vaccination in a dengue-experienced donor
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Dussupt, Vincent, Sankhala, Rajeshwer S., Gromowski, Gregory D., Donofrio, Gina, De La Barrera, Rafael A., Larocca, Rafael A., Zaky, Weam, Mendez-Rivera, Letzibeth, Choe, Misook, Davidson, Edgar, McCracken, Michael K., Brien, James D., Abbink, Peter, Bai, Hongjun, Bryan, Aubrey L., Bias, Candace Hope, Berry, Irina Maljkovic, Botero, Nubia, Cook, Tanya, Doria-Rose, Nicole A., Escuer, Ariadna Grinyo i, Frimpong, Justice Akuoku, Geretz, Aviva, Hernandez, Mayda, Hollidge, Bradley S., Jian, Ningbo, Kabra, Kareem, Leggat, David J., Liu, Jinyan, Pinto, Amelia K., Rutvisuttinunt, Wiriya, Setliff, Ian, Tran, Ursula, Townsley, Samantha, Doranz, Benjamin J., Rolland, Morgane, McDermott, Adrian B., Georgiev, Ivelin S., Thomas, Rasmi, Robb, Merlin L., Eckels, Kenneth H., Barranco, Elizabeth, Koren, Michael, Smith, Darci R., Jarman, Richard G., George, Sarah L., Stephenson, Kathryn E., Barouch, Dan H., Modjarrad, Kayvon, Michael, Nelson L., Joyce, M. Gordon, and Krebs, Shelly J.
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
7. Monocyte-derived transcriptome signature indicates antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis as a potential mechanism of vaccine-induced protection against HIV-1
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Shida Shangguan, Philip K Ehrenberg, Aviva Geretz, Lauren Yum, Gautam Kundu, Kelly May, Slim Fourati, Krystelle Nganou-Makamdop, LaTonya D Williams, Sheetal Sawant, Eric Lewitus, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Suwat Chariyalertsak, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Morgane Rolland, Daniel C Douek, Peter Gilbert, Georgia D Tomaras, Nelson L Michael, Sandhya Vasan, and Rasmi Thomas
- Subjects
HIV vaccine ,transcriptomics ,single cell ,CITE-seq ,vaccine efficacy ,ADCP ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
A gene signature was previously found to be correlated with mosaic adenovirus 26 vaccine protection in simian immunodeficiency virus and simian-human immunodeficiency virus challenge models in non-human primates. In this report, we investigated the presence of this signature as a correlate of reduced risk in human clinical trials and potential mechanisms of protection. The absence of this gene signature in the DNA/rAd5 human vaccine trial, which did not show efficacy, strengthens our hypothesis that this signature is only enriched in studies that demonstrated protection. This gene signature was enriched in the partially effective RV144 human trial that administered the ALVAC/protein vaccine, and we find that the signature associates with both decreased risk of HIV-1 acquisition and increased vaccine efficacy (VE). Total RNA-seq in a clinical trial that used the same vaccine regimen as the RV144 HIV vaccine implicated antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) as a potential mechanism of vaccine protection. CITE-seq profiling of 53 surface markers and transcriptomes of 53,777 single cells from the same trial showed that genes in this signature were primarily expressed in cells belonging to the myeloid lineage, including monocytes, which are major effector cells for ADCP. The consistent association of this transcriptome signature with VE represents a tool both to identify potential mechanisms, as with ADCP here, and to screen novel approaches to accelerate the development of new vaccine candidates.
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- 2021
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- View/download PDF
8. Single-cell transcriptome of in vivo SIV-infected rhesus macaque CD4 T cells
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A. Tokarev, A. Geretz, P. Ehrenberg, M. Roederer, R. Thomas, and D.L. Bolton
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2019
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9. Single cell RNA-seq identifies host genes that correlate with HIV-1 reservoir size
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R. Thomas, A. Waickman, P. Ehrenberg, A. Geretz, M. Eller, S. Tovanabutra, J. Ananworanich, N. Chomont, J. Currier, and N. Michael
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2019
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10. Associations of human leukocyte antigen with neutralizing antibody titers in a tetravalent dengue vaccine phase 2 efficacy trial in Thailand
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Peter B. Gilbert, Shida Shangguan, Fabrice Bailleux, Sanjay Gurunathan, Michal Juraska, Aviva Geretz, Christopher Bryant, Zoe Moodie, Shuying Sue Li, Kriengsak Limkittikul, Danaya Chansinghakul, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Wut Dulyachai, Richard G. Jarman, Nelson L. Michael, Alain Bouckenooghe, Carina Frago, Rasmi Thomas, Arunee Sabchareon, and Weerawan Hattasingh
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Immunology ,Dengue Vaccines ,Context (language use) ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Antibodies, Viral ,Dengue fever ,Dengue ,HLA Antigens ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Vaccines, Combined ,Child ,Neutralizing antibody ,Dengue vaccine ,biology ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Dengue Virus ,Thailand ,medicine.disease ,Vaccine efficacy ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Vaccination ,Titer ,Child, Preschool ,biology.protein ,business - Abstract
The recombinant, live, attenuated, tetravalent dengue vaccine CYD-TDV has shown efficacy against all four dengue serotypes. In this exploratory study (CYD59, NCT02827162), we evaluated potential associations of host human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles with dengue antibody responses, CYD-TDV vaccine efficacy, and virologically-confirmed dengue (VCD) cases. Children 4-11 years old, who previously completed a phase 2b efficacy study of CYD-TDV in a single center in Thailand, were included in the study. Genotyping of HLA class I and II loci was performed by next-generation sequencing from DNA obtained from 335 saliva samples. Dengue neutralizing antibody titers (NAb) were assessed as a correlate of risk and protection. Regression analyses were used to assess associations between HLA alleles and NAb responses, vaccine efficacy, and dengue outcomes. Month 13 NAb log geometric mean titers (GMTs) were associated with decreased risk of VCD. In the vaccine group, HLA-DRB1*11 was significantly associated with higher NAb log GMT levels (beta: 0.76; p = 0.002, q = 0.13). Additionally, in the absence of vaccination, HLA associations were observed between the presence of DPB1*03:01 and increased NAb log GMT levels (beta: 1.24; p = 0.005, q = 0.17), and between DPB1*05:01 and reduced NAb log GMT levels (beta: -1.1; p = 0.001, q = 0.07). This study suggests associations of HLA alleles with NAb titers in the context of dengue outcomes. This study was registered with clinicaltrials.gov: NCT02827162.
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- 2022
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11. Variations in HLA-B cell surface expression, half-life and extracellular antigen receptivity
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Brogan Yarzabek, Anita J Zaitouna, Eli Olson, Gayathri N Silva, Jie Geng, Aviva Geretz, Rasmi Thomas, Sujatha Krishnakumar, Daniel S Ramon, and Malini Raghavan
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HLA-B ,MHC class I ,half-life ,expression ,peptidome ,transporter associated with antigen processing ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The highly polymorphic human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules present peptide antigens to CD8+ T cells, inducing immunity against infections and cancers. Quality control mediated by peptide loading complex (PLC) components is expected to ensure the cell surface expression of stable peptide-HLA class I complexes. This is exemplified by HLA-B*08:01 in primary human lymphocytes, with both expression level and half-life at the high end of the measured HLA-B expression and stability hierarchies. Conversely, low expression on lymphocytes is measured for three HLA-B allotypes that bind peptides with proline at position 2, which are disfavored by the transporter associated with antigen processing. Surprisingly, these lymphocyte-specific expression and stability differences become reversed or altered in monocytes, which display larger intracellular pools of HLA class I than lymphocytes. Together, the findings indicate that allele and cell-dependent variations in antigen acquisition pathways influence HLA-B surface expression levels, half-lives and receptivity to exogenous antigens.
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- 2018
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12. PP 7.6 – 00036 Single cell transcriptomics identifies PTMA as a host gene that inhibits HIV during acute infection in vivo
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Geretz, A., primary, Ehrenberg, P.K., additional, Clifford, R., additional, Laliberte, A., additional, Bozzo, C. Prelli, additional, Shangguan, S., additional, Rolland, M., additional, Phanuphak, N., additional, Apps, R., additional, Robb, M., additional, Ake, J.A., additional, Vasan, S., additional, Hsu, D., additional, Hahn, B., additional, Kirchhoff, F., additional, and Thomas, R., additional
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- 2022
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13. Long-term antiretroviral therapy initiated in acute HIV infection prevents residual dysfunction of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells
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Takata, Hiroshi, primary, Kakazu, Juyeon C., additional, Mitchell, Julie L., additional, Kroon, Eugene, additional, Colby, Donn J., additional, Sacdalan, Carlo, additional, Bai, Hongjun, additional, Ehrenberg, Philip K., additional, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Buranapraditkun, Supranee, additional, Pinyakorn, Suteeraporn, additional, Intasan, Jintana, additional, Tipsuk, Somporn, additional, Suttichom, Duanghathai, additional, Prueksakaew, Peeriya, additional, Chalermchai, Thep, additional, Chomchey, Nitiya, additional, Phanuphak, Nittaya, additional, de Souza, Mark, additional, Michael, Nelson L., additional, Robb, Merlin L., additional, Haddad, Elias K., additional, Crowell, Trevor A, additional, Vasan, Sandhya, additional, Valcour, Victor G., additional, Douek, Daniel C., additional, Thomas, Rasmi, additional, Rolland, Morgane, additional, Chomont, Nicolas, additional, Ananworanich, Jintanat, additional, Trautmann, Lydie, additional, Teeratakulpisarn, Nipat, additional, Pattanachaiwit, Supanit, additional, Sriplienchan, Somchai, additional, Tantivitayakul, Ponpen, additional, Kanaprach, Ratchapong, additional, Ruxrungtham, Kiat, additional, Dumrongpisutikul, Netsiri, additional, Rojnuckarin, Ponlapat, additional, Chottanapund, Suthat, additional, Poltavee, Kultida, additional, Luekasemsuk, Tassanee, additional, Savadsuk, Hathairat, additional, Puttamsawin, Suwanna, additional, Benjapornpong, Khunthalee, additional, Ratnaratorn, Nisakorn, additional, Tangnaree, Kamonkan, additional, Munkong, Chutharat, additional, Thaimanee, Rommanus, additional, Eamyoung, Patcharin, additional, Ubolyam, Sasiwimol, additional, Lerdlum, Sukalya, additional, Manasnayakorn, Sopark, additional, Rerknimitr, Rugsun, additional, Sirivichayakul, Sunee, additional, Wattanaboonyongcharoen, Phandee, additional, Cowden, Jessica, additional, Schuetz, Alexandra, additional, Akapirat, Siriwat, additional, Churikanont, Nampueng, additional, Getchalarat, Saowanit, additional, Hsu, Denise, additional, Turk, Ellen, additional, Butterworth, Oratai, additional, Milazzo, Mark, additional, Eller, Leigh Anne, additional, Ake, Julie, additional, Spudich, Serena, additional, Fox, CAPT Lawrence, additional, Ratto-Kim, Silvia, additional, DeGruttola, Victor, additional, Chinvarun, Yotin, additional, Sithinamsuwan, Pasiri, additional, Fletcher, James, additional, and Shiramizu, Bruce, additional
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- 2022
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14. Floral Transcriptomes in Woodland Strawberry Uncover Developing Receptacle and Anther Gene Networks
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Hollender, Courtney A., Kang, Chunying, Darwish, Omar, Geretz, Aviva, Matthews, Benjamin F., Slovin, Janet, Alkharouf, Nadim, and Liu, Zhongchi
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- 2014
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15. HLA-B∗46 associates with rapid HIV disease progression in Asian cohorts and prominent differences in NK cell phenotype
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Li, Shuying S., primary, Hickey, Andrew, additional, Shangguan, Shida, additional, Ehrenberg, Philip K., additional, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Butler, Lauryn, additional, Kundu, Gautam, additional, Apps, Richard, additional, Creegan, Matthew, additional, Clifford, Robert J., additional, Pinyakorn, Suteeraporn, additional, Eller, Leigh Anne, additional, Luechai, Pikunchai, additional, Gilbert, Peter B., additional, Holtz, Timothy H., additional, Chitwarakorn, Anupong, additional, Sacdalan, Carlo, additional, Kroon, Eugène, additional, Phanuphak, Nittaya, additional, de Souza, Mark, additional, Ananworanich, Jintanat, additional, O'Connell, Robert J., additional, Robb, Merlin L., additional, Michael, Nelson L., additional, Vasan, Sandhya, additional, and Thomas, Rasmi, additional
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- 2022
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16. Genome-Scale Transcriptomic Insights into Early-Stage Fruit Development in Woodland Strawberry Fragaria vesca
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Kang, Chunying, Darwish, Omar, Geretz, Aviva, Shahan, Rachel, Alkharouf, Nadim, and Liu, Zhongchi
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- 2013
17. Flower and early fruit development in a diploid strawberry, Fragaria vesca
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Hollender, Courtney A., Geretz, Aviva C., Slovin, Janet P., and Liu, Zhongchi
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- 2012
18. Potent Zika and dengue cross-neutralizing antibodies induced by Zika vaccination in a dengue-experienced donor
- Author
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Samantha M. Townsley, Kayvon Modjarrad, Bradley S. Hollidge, Rafael A. Larocca, Darci R. Smith, Merlin L. Robb, Rajeshwer S. Sankhala, Ariadna Grinyo i Escuer, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Kareem Kabra, Wiriya Rutvisuttinunt, Aviva Geretz, David J. Leggat, James D. Brien, Justice Akuoku Frimpong, Gregory D. Gromowski, Misook Choe, Ursula Tran, Edgar Davidson, Irina Maljkovic Berry, Mayda Hernandez, Shelly J. Krebs, Adrian B. McDermott, Richard G. Jarman, Aubrey L. Bryan, M. Gordon Joyce, Weam I. Zaky, Kathryn E. Stephenson, Gina Donofrio, Peter Abbink, Rafael De La Barrera, Candace Hope Bias, Jinyan Liu, Vincent Dussupt, Nelson L. Michael, Sarah L. George, Morgane Rolland, Ningbo Jian, Dan H. Barouch, Benjamin J. Doranz, Hongjun Bai, Kenneth H. Eckels, Elizabeth Barranco, Amelia K. Pinto, Rasmi Thomas, Letzibeth Mendez-Rivera, Nubia Botero, Michael K. McCracken, Michael Koren, Tanya Cook, Ian Setliff, and Ivelin S. Georgiev
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0301 basic medicine ,Letter ,viruses ,Dengue virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antibodies, Viral ,Dengue fever ,Zika virus ,Dengue ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,Vaccines ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Zika Virus Infection ,Vaccination ,virus diseases ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,General Medicine ,Tissue Donors ,Flavivirus ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Infectious diseases ,Female ,Structural biology ,Protein Binding ,Viremia ,Cross Reactions ,Microbiology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Inhibitory Concentration 50 ,Protein Domains ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Vero Cells ,business.industry ,Viral Vaccines ,Zika Virus ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Dengue Virus ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,030104 developmental biology ,Immunization ,Vaccines, Inactivated ,Immunoglobulin G ,Inactivated vaccine ,business ,Epitope Mapping - Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) has caused significant disease, with widespread cases of neurological pathology and congenital neurologic defects. Rapid vaccine development has led to a number of candidates capable of eliciting potent ZIKV-neutralizing antibodies (reviewed in refs. 1–3). Despite advances in vaccine development, it remains unclear how ZIKV vaccination affects immune responses in humans with prior flavivirus immunity. Here we show that a single-dose immunization of ZIKV purified inactivated vaccine (ZPIV)4–7 in a dengue virus (DENV)-experienced human elicited potent cross-neutralizing antibodies to both ZIKV and DENV. Using a unique ZIKV virion-based sorting strategy, we isolated and characterized multiple antibodies, including one termed MZ4, which targets a novel site of vulnerability centered on the Envelope (E) domain I/III linker region and protects mice from viremia and viral dissemination following ZIKV or DENV-2 challenge. These data demonstrate that Zika vaccination in a DENV-experienced individual can boost pre-existing flavivirus immunity and elicit protective responses against both ZIKV and DENV. ZPIV vaccination in Puerto Rican individuals with prior flavivirus experience yielded similar cross-neutralizing potency after a single vaccination, highlighting the potential benefit of ZIKV vaccination in flavivirus-endemic areas., Zika virus vaccination elicits Zika and dengue virus cross-neutralizing antibodies in flavivirus-exposed individuals, potentially enhancing the protective efficacy of the vaccine in flavivirus-endemic regions.
- Published
- 2020
19. Author response: Monocyte-derived transcriptome signature indicates antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis as a potential mechanism of vaccine-induced protection against HIV-1
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Kelly May, Suwat Chariyalertsak, Shida Shangguan, Peter B. Gilbert, Georgia D. Tomaras, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Krystelle Nganou-Makamdop, Eric Lewitus, Slim Fourati, Sheetal Sawant, Nelson L. Michael, LaTonya D. Williams, Aviva Geretz, Rasmi Thomas, Lauren Yum, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Gautam Kundu, Daniel C. Douek, Morgane Rolland, and Sandhya Vasan
- Subjects
Transcriptome ,Monocyte derived ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,medicine ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Potential mechanism ,Antibody dependent phagocytosis ,Cell biology - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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20. Monocyte-derived transcriptome signature indicates antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis as a potential mechanism of vaccine-induced protection against HIV-1
- Author
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Rasmi Thomas, Daniel C. Douek, Krystelle Nganou-Makamdop, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Peter B. Gilbert, Aviva Geretz, Eric Lewitus, Slim Fourati, Lauren Yum, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sheetal Sawant, Sandhya Vasan, LaTonya D. Williams, Nelson L. Michael, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Gautam Kundu, Suwat Chariyalertsak, Kelly May, Morgane Rolland, Shida Shangguan, and Georgia D. Tomaras
- Subjects
Time Factors ,HIV vaccine ,HIV Infections ,HIV Antibodies ,medicine.disease_cause ,Monocytes ,Transcriptome ,transcriptomics ,Immunogenicity, Vaccine ,Rhesus macaque ,Databases, Genetic ,Vaccines, DNA ,RNA-Seq ,Biology (General) ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,AIDS Vaccines ,Microbiology and Infectious Disease ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Effector ,General Neuroscience ,Vaccination ,ADCP ,General Medicine ,vaccine efficacy ,single cell ,Treatment Outcome ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Medicine ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Research Article ,Human ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Phagocytosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Vaccine trial ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,Gene signature ,Vaccine efficacy ,Virology ,CITE-seq ,HIV-1 - Abstract
A gene signature was previously found to be correlated with mosaic adenovirus 26 vaccine protection in simian immunodeficiency virus and simian-human immunodeficiency virus challenge models in non-human primates. In this report, we investigated the presence of this signature as a correlate of reduced risk in human clinical trials and potential mechanisms of protection. The absence of this gene signature in the DNA/rAd5 human vaccine trial, which did not show efficacy, strengthens our hypothesis that this signature is only enriched in studies that demonstrated protection. This gene signature was enriched in the partially effective RV144 human trial that administered the ALVAC/protein vaccine, and we find that the signature associates with both decreased risk of HIV-1 acquisition and increased vaccine efficacy (VE). Total RNA-seq in a clinical trial that used the same vaccine regimen as the RV144 HIV vaccine implicated antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) as a potential mechanism of vaccine protection. CITE-seq profiling of 53 surface markers and transcriptomes of 53,777 single cells from the same trial showed that genes in this signature were primarily expressed in cells belonging to the myeloid lineage, including monocytes, which are major effector cells for ADCP. The consistent association of this transcriptome signature with VE represents a tool both to identify potential mechanisms, as with ADCP here, and to screen novel approaches to accelerate the development of new vaccine candidates.
- Published
- 2021
21. HLA-B∗46 associates with rapid HIV disease progression in Asian cohorts and prominent differences in NK cell phenotype
- Author
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Shuying S. Li, Andrew Hickey, Shida Shangguan, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Aviva Geretz, Lauryn Butler, Gautam Kundu, Richard Apps, Matthew Creegan, Robert J. Clifford, Suteeraporn Pinyakorn, Leigh Anne Eller, Pikunchai Luechai, Peter B. Gilbert, Timothy H. Holtz, Anupong Chitwarakorn, Carlo Sacdalan, Eugène Kroon, Nittaya Phanuphak, Mark de Souza, Jintanat Ananworanich, Robert J. O'Connell, Merlin L. Robb, Nelson L. Michael, Sandhya Vasan, Rasmi Thomas, and Global Health
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HIV Infections ,NK cells ,Thailand ,cytotoxic T lymphocytes ,Microbiology ,Article ,KIR ,HLA ,acute HIV infection ,Killer Cells, Natural ,Epitopes ,CD4 counts ,CITE-seq ,Phenotype ,HLA-B Antigens ,Virology ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Parasitology ,RNA-seq - Abstract
Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles have been linked to HIV disease progression and attributed to differences in cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope representation. These findings are largely based on treatment-naive individuals of European and African ancestry. We assessed HLA associations with HIV-1 outcomes in 1,318 individuals from Thailand and found HLA-B∗46:01 (B∗46) associated with accelerated disease in three independent cohorts. B∗46 had no detectable effect on HIV-specific T cell responses, but this allele is unusual in containing an HLA-C epitope that binds inhibitory receptors on natural killer (NK) cells. Unbiased transcriptomic screens showed increased NK cell activation in people with HIV, without B∗46, and simultaneous single-cell profiling of surface proteins and transcriptomes revealed a NK cell subset primed for increased responses in the absence of B∗46. These findings support a role for NK cells in HIV pathogenesis, revealed by the unique properties of the B∗46 allele common only in Asia.
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- 2022
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22. Monocyte-derived transcriptome signature indicates antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis as the primary mechanism of vaccine-induced protection against HIV-1
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Georgia D. Tomaras, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Daniel C. Douek, Gautam Kundu, Sheetal Sawant, Rasmi Thomas, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sandhya Vasan, Peter B. Gilbert, Shida Shangguan, Eric Lewitus, Slim Fourati, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Lauren Yum, Nelson L. Michael, Krystelle Nganou-Makamdop, LaTonya D. Williams, Aviva Geretz, Suwat Chariyalertsak, Kelly May, and Morgane Rolland
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Transcriptome ,biology ,medicine ,Vaccine trial ,biology.protein ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,Gene signature ,Antibody ,HIV vaccine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Vaccine efficacy ,Gene ,Virology - Abstract
A gene signature previously correlated with mosaic adenovirus 26 vaccine protection in simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) and SHIV challenge models in non-human primates (NHP). In this report we investigated presence of this signature as a correlate of reduced risk in human clinical trials and potential mechanism for protection. The absence of this gene signature in the DNA/rAd5 human vaccine trial which did not show efficacy, strengthens our hypothesis that this signature is only enriched in studies that demonstrated protection. This gene signature was enriched in the partially effective RV144 human trial that administered the ALVAC/protein vaccine, and we find that the signature associates with both decreased risk of HIV-1 acquisition and increased vaccine efficacy. Total RNA-seq in a clinical trial that used the same vaccine regimen as the RV144 HIV vaccine implicated antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) as a potential mechanism of vaccine protection. CITE-seq profiling of 53 surface markers and transcriptomes of 53,777 single cells from the same trial, showed that genes in this signature were primarily expressed in cells belonging to the myeloid lineage including monocytes, which are major effector cells for ADCP. The consistent association of this transcriptome signature with vaccine efficacy represents a tool both to identify potential mechanisms, as with ADCP here, and to screen novel approaches to accelerate development of new vaccine candidates.
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- 2021
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23. Monocyte-derived transcriptome signature indicates antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis as a potential mechanism of vaccine-induced protection against HIV-1
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Shangguan, Shida, primary, Ehrenberg, Philip K, additional, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Yum, Lauren, additional, Kundu, Gautam, additional, May, Kelly, additional, Fourati, Slim, additional, Nganou-Makamdop, Krystelle, additional, Williams, LaTonya D, additional, Sawant, Sheetal, additional, Lewitus, Eric, additional, Pitisuttithum, Punnee, additional, Nitayaphan, Sorachai, additional, Chariyalertsak, Suwat, additional, Rerks-Ngarm, Supachai, additional, Rolland, Morgane, additional, Douek, Daniel C, additional, Gilbert, Peter, additional, Tomaras, Georgia D, additional, Michael, Nelson L, additional, Vasan, Sandhya, additional, and Thomas, Rasmi, additional
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- 2021
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24. B cell engagement with HIV-1 founder virus envelope predicts development of broadly neutralizing antibodies
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Philip K. Ehrenberg, Mary Bryson Piechowiak, Anna Lee, Ursula Tran, Bonnie M. Slike, Samantha M. Townsley, Shelly J. Krebs, Adrian B. McDermott, Caroline E. Peterson, Syna Gift, Ningbo Jian, Nelson L. Michael, Lauryn Cofer, John R. Mascola, Aviva Geretz, M. Gordon Joyce, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Leigh Anne Eller, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Merlin L. Robb, Sodsai Tovanabutra, Rebecca Grande, Rasmi Thomas, Gina Donofrio, Letzibeth Mendez-Rivera, Morgane Rolland, Vincent Dussupt, David J. Leggat, Victoria R. Polonis, and Misook Choe
- Subjects
Naive B cell ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Acute infection ,Viremia ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,HIV Antibodies ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Neutralization ,Article ,Cell Line ,Epitopes ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Viral envelope ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,B cell ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,B-Lymphocytes ,env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus ,virus diseases ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Viral Envelope ,biology.protein ,HIV-1 ,Parasitology ,Antibody ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies - Abstract
Summary Determining which immunological mechanisms contribute to the development of broad neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) during HIV-1 infection is a major goal to inform vaccine design. Using samples from a longitudinal HIV-1 acute infection cohort, we found key B cell determinants within the first 14–43 days of viremia that predict the development of bNAbs years later. Individuals who develop neutralization breadth had significantly higher B cell engagement with the autologous founder HIV envelope (Env) within 1 month of initial viremia. A higher frequency of founder-Env-specific naive B cells was associated with increased B cell activation and differentiation and predictive of bNAb development. These data demonstrate that the initial B cell interaction with the founder HIV Env is important for the development of broadly neutralizing antibodies and provide evidence that events within HIV acute infection lead to downstream functional outcomes.
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- 2021
25. B cell engagement with HIV-1 founder virus envelope predicts development of broadly neutralizing antibodies
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Townsley, Samantha M., primary, Donofrio, Gina C., additional, Jian, Ningbo, additional, Leggat, David J., additional, Dussupt, Vincent, additional, Mendez-Rivera, Letzibeth, additional, Eller, Leigh Anne, additional, Cofer, Lauryn, additional, Choe, Misook, additional, Ehrenberg, Philip K., additional, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Gift, Syna, additional, Grande, Rebecca, additional, Lee, Anna, additional, Peterson, Caroline, additional, Piechowiak, Mary Bryson, additional, Slike, Bonnie M., additional, Tran, Ursula, additional, Joyce, M. Gordon, additional, Georgiev, Ivelin S., additional, Rolland, Morgane, additional, Thomas, Rasmi, additional, Tovanabutra, Sodsai, additional, Doria-Rose, Nicole A., additional, Polonis, Victoria R., additional, Mascola, John R., additional, McDermott, Adrian B., additional, Michael, Nelson L., additional, Robb, Merlin L., additional, and Krebs, Shelly J., additional
- Published
- 2021
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26. Single cell RNA-seq identifies host genes that correlate with HIV-1 reservoir size
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Sodsai Tovanabutra, A. Geretz, Rhys H. Thomas, A. Waickman, Jintanat Ananworanich, Nicolas Chomont, Nelson L. Michael, Philip K. Ehrenberg, M. Eller, and J. Currier
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Genetics ,Epidemiology ,Host (biology) ,Immunology ,Cell ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,RNA-Seq ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Virology ,medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Gene - Published
- 2019
27. Quality control project of NGS HLA genotyping for the 17th International HLA and Immunogenetics Workshop
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UMC Utrecht, CDL Patiëntenzorg MI, Infection & Immunity, Osoegawa, Kazutoyo, Vayntrub, Tamara A, Wenda, Sabine, De Santis, Dianne, Barsakis, Konstantinos, Ivanova, Milena, Hsu, Susan, Barone, Jonathan, Holdsworth, Rhonda, Diviney, Mary, Askar, Medhat, Willis, Amanda, Railton, Dawn, Laflin, Sophie, Gendzekhadze, Ketevan, Oki, Arisa, Sacchi, Nicoletta, Mazzocco, Michela, Andreani, Marco, Ameen, Reem, Stavropoulos-Giokas, Catherine, Dinou, Amalia, Torres, Margareth, Dos Santos Francisco, Rodrigo, Serra-Pages, Carles, Goodridge, Damian, Balladares, Sandra, Bettinotti, Maria P, Iglehart, Brian, Kashi, Zahra, Martin, Russell, Saw, Chee Loong, Ragoussis, Jiannis, Downing, Jonathan, Navarrete, Cristina, Chong, Winnie, Saito, Katsuyuki, Petrek, Martin, Tokic, Stana, Padros, Karin, Beatriz Rodriguez, Ma, Zakharova, Viktoria, Shragina, Olga, Marino, Susana R, Brown, Nicholas K, Shiina, Takashi, Suzuki, Shingo, Spierings, Eric, Zhang, Qiuheng, Yin, Yuxin, Morris, Gerald P, Hernandez, Ana, Ruiz, Phillip, Khor, Seik-Soon, Tokunaga, Katsushi, Geretz, Aviva, Thomas, Rasmi, Yamamoto, Fumiko, Mallempati, Kalyan C, Gangavarapu, Sridevi, Kanga, Uma, Tyagi, Shweta, Marsh, Steven G E, Bultitude, Will P, Liu, Xiangjun, Cao, Dajiang, Penning, Maarten, Hurley, Carolyn K, Cesbron, Anne, Mueller, Claudia, Mytilineos, Joannis, Weimer, Eric T, Bengtsson, Mats, Fischer, Gottfried, Hansen, John A, Chang, Chia-Jung, Mack, Steven J, Creary, Lisa E, Fernandez-Viña, Marcelo A, UMC Utrecht, CDL Patiëntenzorg MI, Infection & Immunity, Osoegawa, Kazutoyo, Vayntrub, Tamara A, Wenda, Sabine, De Santis, Dianne, Barsakis, Konstantinos, Ivanova, Milena, Hsu, Susan, Barone, Jonathan, Holdsworth, Rhonda, Diviney, Mary, Askar, Medhat, Willis, Amanda, Railton, Dawn, Laflin, Sophie, Gendzekhadze, Ketevan, Oki, Arisa, Sacchi, Nicoletta, Mazzocco, Michela, Andreani, Marco, Ameen, Reem, Stavropoulos-Giokas, Catherine, Dinou, Amalia, Torres, Margareth, Dos Santos Francisco, Rodrigo, Serra-Pages, Carles, Goodridge, Damian, Balladares, Sandra, Bettinotti, Maria P, Iglehart, Brian, Kashi, Zahra, Martin, Russell, Saw, Chee Loong, Ragoussis, Jiannis, Downing, Jonathan, Navarrete, Cristina, Chong, Winnie, Saito, Katsuyuki, Petrek, Martin, Tokic, Stana, Padros, Karin, Beatriz Rodriguez, Ma, Zakharova, Viktoria, Shragina, Olga, Marino, Susana R, Brown, Nicholas K, Shiina, Takashi, Suzuki, Shingo, Spierings, Eric, Zhang, Qiuheng, Yin, Yuxin, Morris, Gerald P, Hernandez, Ana, Ruiz, Phillip, Khor, Seik-Soon, Tokunaga, Katsushi, Geretz, Aviva, Thomas, Rasmi, Yamamoto, Fumiko, Mallempati, Kalyan C, Gangavarapu, Sridevi, Kanga, Uma, Tyagi, Shweta, Marsh, Steven G E, Bultitude, Will P, Liu, Xiangjun, Cao, Dajiang, Penning, Maarten, Hurley, Carolyn K, Cesbron, Anne, Mueller, Claudia, Mytilineos, Joannis, Weimer, Eric T, Bengtsson, Mats, Fischer, Gottfried, Hansen, John A, Chang, Chia-Jung, Mack, Steven J, Creary, Lisa E, and Fernandez-Viña, Marcelo A
- Published
- 2019
28. A vaccine-induced gene expression signature correlates with protection against SIV and HIV in multiple trials
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Rasmi Thomas, Biju Issac, Aviva Geretz, Richard Apps, Michael A. Eller, Rafick Pierre Sekaly, Frank Wegmann, Diane L. Bolton, Dan H. Barouch, Galit Alter, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Robert Gramzinski, Maria G. Pau, Nelson L. Michael, Taisuke Izumi, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Merlin L. Robb, Matthew Creegan, Shida Shangguan, and Christopher Bryant
- Subjects
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Canarypox ,Biology ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Flow cytometry ,Transcriptome ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Gene ,AIDS Vaccines ,B-Lymphocytes ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vaccination ,General Medicine ,Gene signature ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,biology.organism_classification ,Flow Cytometry ,Virology ,Macaca mulatta ,HIV-1 ,Simian Immunodeficiency Virus - Abstract
Current HIV vaccines are only partially efficacious, presenting an opportunity to identify correlates of protection and, thereby, potential insight into mechanisms that prevent HIV acquisition. Two independent preclinical challenge studies in nonhuman primates (NHPs) previously showed partial efficacy of a mosaic adenovirus 26 (Ad26)-based HIV-1 vaccine candidate. To investigate the basis of this protection, we performed whole transcriptomics profiling by RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) in sorted lymphocytes from peripheral blood samples taken during these studies at different time points after vaccination but before challenge. We observed a transcriptional signature in B cells that associated with protection from acquisition of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) or the simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) in both studies. Strong antibody responses were elicited, and genes from the signature for which expression was enriched specifically associated with higher magnitude of functional antibody responses. The same gene expression signature also associated with protection in RV144 in the only human HIV vaccine trial to date that has shown efficacy and in two additional NHP studies that evaluated similar canarypox-based vaccine regimens. A composite gene expression score derived from the gene signature was one of the top-ranked correlates of protection in the NHP vaccine studies. This study aims to bridge preclinical and clinical data with the identification of a gene signature in B cells that is associated with protection from SIV and HIV infection by providing a new approach for evaluating future vaccine candidates.
- Published
- 2018
29. Variations in HLA-B cell surface expression, half-life and extracellular antigen receptivity
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Gayathri N. Silva, Anita J. Zaitouna, Eli Olson, Sujatha Krishnakumar, Aviva Geretz, Brogan Yarzabek, Daniel S. Ramon, Rasmi Thomas, Malini Raghavan, and Jie Geng
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0301 basic medicine ,HLA-B ,transporter associated with antigen processing ,half-life ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Human leukocyte antigen ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immunology and Inflammation ,Antigen ,MHC class I ,expression ,Extracellular ,peptidome ,Humans ,Biology (General) ,Antigen Presentation ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Genetic Variation ,General Medicine ,Transporter associated with antigen processing ,Peptide Fragments ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,HLA-B Antigens ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,Intracellular ,CD8 ,030215 immunology ,Research Article ,Human - Abstract
The highly polymorphic human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules present peptide antigens to CD8+ T cells, inducing immunity against infections and cancers. Quality control mediated by peptide loading complex (PLC) components is expected to ensure the cell surface expression of stable peptide-HLA class I complexes. This is exemplified by HLA-B*08:01 in primary human lymphocytes, with both expression level and half-life at the high end of the measured HLA-B expression and stability hierarchies. Conversely, low expression on lymphocytes is measured for three HLA-B allotypes that bind peptides with proline at position 2, which are disfavored by the transporter associated with antigen processing. Surprisingly, these lymphocyte-specific expression and stability differences become reversed or altered in monocytes, which display larger intracellular pools of HLA class I than lymphocytes. Together, the findings indicate that allele and cell-dependent variations in antigen acquisition pathways influence HLA-B surface expression levels, half-lives and receptivity to exogenous antigens., eLife digest Most cells in the body make proteins called human leukocyte antigen class I (or HLA-I). These proteins sit on the cell surface, where they help the immune system distinguish between healthy and diseased cells. A groove in each HLA-I protein holds a fragment of a protein chain, called a peptide, from inside the cell. In healthy cells, all the peptides come from normal proteins. Yet in diseased or infected cells, the peptides may come from abnormal or foreign proteins – those encoded by viruses, for example. When the immune system sees these abnormal peptides, it responds by killing the cell. Across the human population, there are thousands of types of HLA-I, each able to carry a different set of peptides. Any individual person can only make a maximum of six types of the HLA-I, meaning we each show a different combination of peptides to our immune cells. This difference will change the way different people respond to the same disease. Before a peptide can be assembled into HLA-I, it must be moved to the correct part of the cell by a transporter known as TAP. This transport favors peptides with certain characteristics, but these characteristics do not always match the preferences of the individual's HLA-I proteins. For example, TAP is less likely to transport peptides where the second building block in the chain is a proline, but these peptides will still fit into the binding grooves of some HLA-I variants. Here, Yarzabek, Zaitouna, Olson et al. obtained blood from healthy human donors to answer questions about what happens when TAP and HLA-I have different preferences. Specifically, how many HLA-I molecules reach the surface, how long do they last, and which peptides do they carry? This analysis revealed that, when there was a mismatch between HLA-I and TAP, the amount of some HLA-I types on the surface of white blood cells called lymphocytes dropped. These HLA-I types were also able to pick up new peptides from their environment, indicating that some HLA-I were at the surface of the cell without a peptide. The role of these empty HLA-I remains to be fully defined. The reverse was true for other white blood cells called monocytes; HLA-I variants that were mismatched with TAP became more abundant on the cell surface. Monocytes also had more HLA-I molecules inside and did not pick up peptides from the environment. This suggests that monocytes may load peptides via new pathways, filling grooves left empty in lymphocytes, although other mechanisms might also explain the differences between the two types of white blood cells. Taken together, the findings reveal that HLA-I on the surface of cells depends on both the type of HLA-I and the type of immune cell. HLA-I proteins play a key role in the immune system’s ability to recognize and kill diseased cells. A better knowledge of how HLA-I variants differ could help us to understand why people respond differently to the same disease. A better grasp of HLA-I could in the future lead to improved drug and vaccine design.
- Published
- 2018
30. Author response: Variations in HLA-B cell surface expression, half-life and extracellular antigen receptivity
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Daniel S. Ramon, Sujatha Krishnakumar, Malini Raghavan, Brogan Yarzabek, Gayathri N. Silva, Aviva Geretz, Rasmi Thomas, Jie Geng, Eli Olson, and Anita J. Zaitouna
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medicine.anatomical_structure ,Antigen ,Cell ,medicine ,Receptivity ,Extracellular ,Half-life ,Surface expression ,Biology ,HLA-B ,Cell biology - Published
- 2018
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31. Single-cell transcriptome of in vivo SIV-infected rhesus macaque CD4 T cells
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Tokarev, A., primary, Geretz, A., additional, Ehrenberg, P., additional, Roederer, M., additional, Thomas, R., additional, and Bolton, D.L., additional
- Published
- 2019
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32. Single cell RNA-seq identifies host genes that correlate with HIV-1 reservoir size
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Thomas, R., primary, Waickman, A., additional, Ehrenberg, P., additional, Geretz, A., additional, Eller, M., additional, Tovanabutra, S., additional, Ananworanich, J., additional, Chomont, N., additional, Currier, J., additional, and Michael, N., additional
- Published
- 2019
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33. HLA class II diversity in HIV-1 uninfected individuals from the placebo arm of the RV144 Thai vaccine efficacy trial
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Aviva Geretz, Jerome H. Kim, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Robert J. O'Connell, Rasmi Thomas, Karen M. Baldwin, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Heather A. Prentice, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, and Sorachai Nitayaphan
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Genetics ,HLA-DQB1 ,HLA-DPB1 ,Immunology ,Haplotype ,General Medicine ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Biology ,Vaccine efficacy ,Biochemistry ,Transplantation ,Immunology and Allergy ,HLA-DRB1 ,Genotyping - Abstract
The RV144 HIV vaccine trial in Thailand elicited antibody responses to the envelope of HIV-1, which correlated significantly with the risk of HIV-1 acquisition. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules are essential in antigen presentation to CD4 T cells for activation of B cells to produce antibodies. We genotyped the classical HLA-DRB1, DQB1, and DPB1 genes in 450 individuals from the placebo arm of the RV144 study to determine the background allele and haplotype frequencies of these genes in this cohort. High-resolution 4 and 6-digit class II HLA typing data was generated using sequencing-based methods. The observed diversity for the HLA loci was 33 HLA-DRB1, 15 HLA-DQB1, and 26 HLA-DPB1 alleles. Common alleles with frequencies greater than 10% were DRB1*07:01, DRB1*09:01, DRB1*12:02, DRB1*15:02, DQB1*02:01/02, DQB1*03:01, DQB1*03:03, DQB1*05:01, DQB1*05:02, DPB1*04:01:01, DPB1*05:01:01, and DPB1*13:01:01. We identified 28 rare alleles with frequencies of less than 1% in the Thai individuals. Ambiguity for HLA-DPB1*28:01 in exon 2 was resolved to DPB1*296:01 by next-generation sequencing of all exons. Multi-locus haplotypes including HLA class I and II loci were reported in this study. This is the first comprehensive report of allele and haplotype frequencies of all three HLA class II genes from a Thai population. A high-resolution genotyping method such as next-generation sequencing avoids missing rare alleles and resolves ambiguous calls. The HLA class II genotyping data generated in this study will be beneficial not only for future disease association/vaccine efficacy studies related to the RV144 study, but also for similar studies in other diseases in the Thai population, as well as population genetics and transplantation studies.
- Published
- 2015
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34. High-throughput next-generation sequencing to genotype six classical HLA loci from 96 donors in a single MiSeq run
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Aviva Geretz, T. Vayntrub, Richard Apps, Nelson L. Michael, Philip K. Ehrenberg, M. A. Fernández Viña, R. K. Sindhu, and Rasmi Thomas
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,FASTQ format ,Genotype ,Immunology ,Locus (genetics) ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,DNA sequencing ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,HLA Antigens ,Genetics ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Genotyping ,Alleles ,Sanger sequencing ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Amplicon ,Tissue Donors ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetic Loci ,symbols ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Next generation sequencing (NGS) methods have been established as an efficient approach for HLA typing because unlike traditional Sanger sequencing, they provide unambiguous results at a reasonable cost. We previously developed a multi-locus index method to genotype four HLA loci (A, B, C, and DRB1) on the Illumina MiSeq platform. We have now expanded this method to include two additional loci, HLA-DPB1 and DQB1. Contiguous full-length amplicons from 5'UTR through 3'UTR regions were generated using one long-range PCR reaction per locus for each of the six loci from 96 individuals of different ethnicities. The six amplicons from each donor were pooled, enzymatically fragmented and given a donor-specific index. This approach enabled sequencing of 576 loci from 96 individuals in a single MiSeq run. Donor-specific sequence reads were demultiplexed, and allele calls were generated from FASTQ files using commercially available software. Comparison to HLA genotypes generated from Sanger sequence-based typing (SBT) identified no discordances among any of the alleles analyzed in this study. Importantly, this method was able to resolve 22 DPB1 and 20 DQB1 alleles that were ambiguous with the SBT method. Furthermore, a novel allele in each of these two loci was identified, with the DQB1*05:01:24 allele having a frequency of greater than five percent. This method was subsequently validated against a blinded panel of 22 samples from the 17th International HLA and Immunogenetics Workshop. The flexibility of the method is further highlighted by successful genotyping of eight loci comprising all classical HLA loci for a subset of the samples. We now present a high-throughput, high-resolution, scalable NGS HLA typing method to accurately and efficiently genotype all classical HLA class I and II loci.
- Published
- 2017
35. Floral Transcriptomes in Woodland Strawberry Uncover Developing Receptacle and Anther Gene Networks
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Courtney A. Hollender, Aviva Geretz, Zhongchi Liu, Chunying Kang, Janet P. Slovin, Nadim W. Alkharouf, Benjamin F. Matthews, and Omar Darwish
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Gynoecium ,biology ,Physiology ,fungi ,Stamen ,food and beverages ,Articles ,Plant Science ,Meristem ,biology.organism_classification ,Fragaria ,Genome ,Woodland Strawberry ,Botany ,Genetics ,Receptacle ,Gene - Abstract
Flowers are reproductive organs and precursors to fruits and seeds. While the basic tenets of the ABCE model of flower development are conserved in angiosperms, different flowering plants exhibit different and sometimes unique characteristics. A distinct feature of strawberry (Fragaria spp.) flowers is the development of several hundreds of individual apocarpous (unfused) carpels. These individual carpels are arranged in a spiral pattern on the subtending stem tip, the receptacle. Therefore, the receptacle is an integral part of the strawberry flower and is of significant agronomic importance, being the precursor to strawberry fruit. Taking advantage of next-generation sequencing and laser capture microdissection, we generated different tissue- and stage-transcriptomic profiling of woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) flower development. Using pairwise comparisons and weighted gene coexpression network analysis, we identified modules of coexpressed genes and hub genes of tissue-specific networks. Of particular importance is the discovery of a developing receptacle-specific module exhibiting similar molecular features to those of young floral meristems. The strawberry homologs of a number of meristem regulators, including LOST MERISTEM and WUSCHEL, are identified as hub genes operating in the developing receptacle network. Furthermore, almost 25% of the F-box genes in the genome are transiently induced in developing anthers at the meiosis stage, indicating active protein degradation. Together, this work provides important insights into the molecular networks underlying strawberry's unique reproductive developmental processes. This extensive floral transcriptome data set is publicly available and can be readily queried at the project Web site, serving as an important genomic resource for the plant biology research community.
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- 2014
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36. Single-cell transcriptome of in vivo SIV-infected rhesus macaque CD4 T cells
- Author
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Rasmi Thomas, A. Geretz, A. Tokarev, D.L. Bolton, Philip K. Ehrenberg, and M. Roederer
- Subjects
Epidemiology ,Immunology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Cell biology ,Rhesus macaque ,Infectious Diseases ,In vivo ,Single cell transcriptome ,Virology ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2019
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37. Variations in HLA-B cell surface expression, half-life and extracellular antigen receptivity
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Yarzabek, Brogan, primary, Zaitouna, Anita J, additional, Olson, Eli, additional, Silva, Gayathri N, additional, Geng, Jie, additional, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Thomas, Rasmi, additional, Krishnakumar, Sujatha, additional, Ramon, Daniel S, additional, and Raghavan, Malini, additional
- Published
- 2018
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38. Genome-Scale Transcriptomic Insights into Early-Stage Fruit Development in Woodland Strawberry Fragaria vesca
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Aviva Geretz, Nadim W. Alkharouf, Omar Darwish, Rachel Shahan, Zhongchi Liu, and Chunying Kang
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Achene ,Large-Scale Biology Articles ,Rosaceae ,Flowers ,Plant Science ,Fragaria ,Endosperm ,Woodland Strawberry ,Anthesis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Auxin ,Botany ,Receptacle ,Cluster Analysis ,Phylogeny ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Plant Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Indoleacetic Acids ,biology ,fungi ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Gibberellins ,chemistry ,Fruit ,Transcriptome ,Genome, Plant - Abstract
Fragaria vesca, a diploid woodland strawberry with a small and sequenced genome, is an excellent model for studying fruit development. The strawberry fruit is unique in that the edible flesh is actually enlarged receptacle tissue. The true fruit are the numerous dry achenes dotting the receptacle's surface. Auxin produced from the achene is essential for the receptacle fruit set, a paradigm for studying crosstalk between hormone signaling and development. To investigate the molecular mechanism underlying strawberry fruit set, next-generation sequencing was employed to profile early-stage fruit development with five fruit tissue types and five developmental stages from floral anthesis to enlarged fruits. This two-dimensional data set provides a systems-level view of molecular events with precise spatial and temporal resolution. The data suggest that the endosperm and seed coat may play a more prominent role than the embryo in auxin and gibberellin biosynthesis for fruit set. A model is proposed to illustrate how hormonal signals produced in the endosperm and seed coat coordinate seed, ovary wall, and receptacle fruit development. The comprehensive fruit transcriptome data set provides a wealth of genomic resources for the strawberry and Rosaceae communities as well as unprecedented molecular insight into fruit set and early stage fruit development.
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- 2013
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39. HLA class II diversity in HIV-1 uninfected individuals from the placebo arm of the RV144 Thai vaccine efficacy trial
- Author
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Baldwin, Karen M., Ehrenberg, Philip K., Geretz, Aviva, Prentice, Heather A., Nitayaphan, Sorachai, Rerks-Ngarm, Supachai, Kaewkungwal, Jaranit, Pitisuttithum, Punnee, O’Connell, Robert J., Kim, Jerome H., and Thomas, Rasmi
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,AIDS Vaccines ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class II ,Genetic Variation ,HIV Infections ,Thailand ,Article ,Placebos ,Treatment Outcome ,Gene Frequency ,Haplotypes ,HIV-1 ,HLA-DQ beta-Chains ,Humans ,Alleles ,HLA-DP beta-Chains ,HLA-DRB1 Chains - Abstract
The RV144 HIV vaccine trial in Thailand elicited antibody responses to the envelope of HIV-1, which correlated significantly with the risk of HIV-1 acquisition. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules are essential in antigen presentation to CD4 T cells for activation of B cells to produce antibodies. We genotyped the classical HLA-DRB1, DQB1, and DPB1 genes in 450 individuals from the placebo arm of the RV144 study to determine the background allele and haplotype frequencies of these genes in this cohort. High-resolution 4 and 6-digit class II HLA typing data was generated using sequencing-based methods. The observed diversity for the HLA loci was 33 HLA-DRB1, 15 HLA-DQB1, and 26 HLA-DPB1 alleles. Common alleles with frequencies greater than 10% were DRB1*07:01, DRB1*09:01, DRB1*12:02, DRB1*15:02, DQB1*02:01/02, DQB1*03:01, DQB1*03:03, DQB1*05:01, DQB1*05:02, DPB1*04:01:01, DPB1*05:01:01, and DPB1*13:01:01. We identified 28 rare alleles with frequencies of less than 1% in the Thai individuals. Ambiguity for HLA-DPB1*28:01 in exon 2 was resolved to DPB1*296:01 by next-generation sequencing of all exons. Multi-locus haplotypes including HLA class I and II loci were reported in this study. This is the first comprehensive report of allele and haplotype frequencies of all three HLA class II genes from a Thai population. A high-resolution genotyping method such as next-generation sequencing avoids missing rare alleles and resolves ambiguous calls. The HLA class II genotyping data generated in this study will be beneficial not only for future disease association/vaccine efficacy studies related to the RV144 study, but also for similar studies in other diseases in the Thai population, as well as population genetics and transplantation studies.
- Published
- 2015
40. High-throughput multiplex HLA genotyping by next-generation sequencing using multi-locus individual tagging
- Author
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Richard Apps, Aviva Geretz, Jerome H. Kim, Victoria R. Polonis, Philip K. Ehrenberg, Nelson L. Michael, Merlin L. Robb, Karen M. Baldwin, and Rasmi Thomas
- Subjects
Genotyping Techniques ,HLA-C Antigens ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Biology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,DNA sequencing ,symbols.namesake ,Genetics ,HLA-B Antigens ,Humans ,Multiplex ,Typing ,Sanger sequencing ,HLA-A Antigens ,Histocompatibility Testing ,Methodology Article ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Illumina MiSeq ,Amplicon ,HLA ,HLA typing ,NGS ,symbols ,HLA-DRB1 Chains ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Background Unambiguous human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing is important in transplant matching and disease association studies. High-resolution HLA typing that is not restricted to the peptide-binding region can decrease HLA allele ambiguities. Cost and technology constraints have hampered high-throughput and efficient high resolution unambiguous HLA typing. We have developed a method for HLA genotyping that preserves the very high-resolution that can be obtained by next-generation sequencing (NGS) but also achieves substantially increased efficiency. Unambiguous HLA-A, B, C and DRB1 genotypes can be determined for 96 individuals in a single run of the Illumina MiSeq. Results Long-range amplification of full-length HLA genes from four loci was performed in separate polymerase chain reactions (PCR) using primers and PCR conditions that were optimized to reduce co-amplification of other HLA loci. Amplicons from the four HLA loci of each individual were then pooled and subjected to enzymatic library generation. All four loci of an individual were then tagged with one unique index combination. This multi-locus individual tagging (MIT) method combined with NGS enabled the four loci of 96 individuals to be analyzed in a single 500 cycle sequencing paired-end run of the Illumina-MiSeq. The MIT-NGS method generated sequence reads from the four loci were then discriminated using commercially available NGS HLA typing software. Comparison of the MIT-NGS with Sanger sequence-based HLA typing methods showed that all the ambiguities and discordances between the two methods were due to the accuracy of the MIT-NGS method. Conclusions The MIT-NGS method enabled accurate, robust and cost effective simultaneous analyses of four HLA loci per sample and produced 6 or 8-digit high-resolution unambiguous phased HLA typing data from 96 individuals in a single NGS run. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-864) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Flower and early fruit development in a diploid strawberry, Fragaria vesca
- Author
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Janet P. Slovin, Zhongchi Liu, Courtney A. Hollender, and Aviva Geretz
- Subjects
Gynoecium ,Plant genetics ,Stamen ,Plant Science ,Flowers ,Genes, Plant ,Fragaria ,Woodland Strawberry ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Botany ,Ornamental plant ,Genetics ,In Situ Hybridization ,Plant Proteins ,biology ,Agamous ,Reproduction ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,biology.organism_classification ,Diploidy ,Organ Specificity ,Fruit ,Ploidy ,Plant Shoots - Abstract
The diploid woodland strawberry, Fragaria vesca, is being recognized as a model for the more complex octoploid commercial strawberry, Fragaria × ananassa. F. vesca exhibits a short seed to seed cycle, can be easily transformed by Agrobacteria, and a draft genome sequence has been published. These features, together with its similar flower structure, potentially make F. vesca a good model for studying the flower development of other members of the Rosaceae family, which contains many economically important fruit trees and ornamental plants. To propel F. vesca’s role in genetic and genomic research and to facilitate the study of its reproductive development, we have investigated in detail F. vesca flower and early fruit development using a seventh generation inbred diploid line, Yellow Wonder 5AF7. We present here standardized developmental staging and detailed descriptions of morphological changes associated with flower and early fruit development based on images of hand dissected flowers, histological sections, and scanning electron microscopy. In situ hybridization with the F. vesca AGAMOUS homolog, FvAG, showed expression in young stamen and carpel primordia. This work lays the essential groundwork and standardization for future molecular, genetic, and genomic studies of F. vesca.
- Published
- 2011
42. High-throughput multiplex HLA genotyping by next-generation sequencing using multi-locus individual tagging
- Author
-
Ehrenberg, Philip K, primary, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Baldwin, Karen M, additional, Apps, Richard, additional, Polonis, Victoria R, additional, Robb, Merlin L, additional, Kim, Jerome H, additional, Michael, Nelson L, additional, and Thomas, Rasmi, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. SGR: an online genomic resource for the woodland strawberry
- Author
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Darwish, Omar, Darwish, Omar, Slovin, Janet P, Kang, Chunying, Hollender, Courtney A, Geretz, Aviva, Houston, Sam, Liu, Zhongchi, Alkharouf, Nadim W, Darwish, Omar, Darwish, Omar, Slovin, Janet P, Kang, Chunying, Hollender, Courtney A, Geretz, Aviva, Houston, Sam, Liu, Zhongchi, and Alkharouf, Nadim W
- Abstract
Fragaria vesca, a diploid strawberry species commonly known as the alpine or woodland strawberry, is a versatile experimental plant system and an emerging model for the Rosaceae family. An ancestral F. vesca genome contributed to the genome of the octoploid dessert strawberry (F. ×ananassa), and the extant genome exhibits synteny with other commercially important members of the Rosaceae family such as apple and peach. To provide a molecular description of floral organ and fruit development at the resolution of specific tissues and cell types, RNAs from flowers and early developmental stage fruit tissues of the inbred F. vesca line YW5AF7 were extracted and the resulting cDNA libraries sequenced using an Illumina HiSeq2000. To enable easy access as well as mining of this two-dimensional (stage and tissue) transcriptome dataset, a web-based database, the Strawberry Genomic Resource (SGR), was developed. SGR is a web accessible database that contains sample description, sample statistics, gene annotation, and gene expression analysis. This information can be accessed publicly from a web-based interface at http://bioinformatics.towson.edu/strawberry/Default.aspx . The SGR website provides user friendly search and browse capabilities for all the data stored in the database. Users are able to search for genes using a gene ID or description or obtain differentially expressed genes by entering different comparison parameters. Search results can be downloaded in a tabular format compatible with Microsoft excel application. Aligned reads to individual genes and exon/intron structures are displayed using the genome browser, facilitating gene re-annotation by individual users. The SGR database was developed to facilitate dissemination and data mining of extensive floral and fruit transcriptome data in the woodland strawberry. It enables users to mine the data in different ways to study different pathways or biological processes during reproductive development.
- Published
- 2013
44. SGR: an online genomic resource for the woodland strawberry
- Author
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Darwish, Omar, primary, Slovin, Janet P, additional, Kang, Chunying, additional, Hollender, Courtney A, additional, Geretz, Aviva, additional, Houston, Sam, additional, Liu, Zhongchi, additional, and Alkharouf, Nadim W, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Flower and early fruit development in a diploid strawberry, Fragaria vesca
- Author
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Hollender, Courtney A., primary, Geretz, Aviva C., additional, Slovin, Janet P., additional, and Liu, Zhongchi, additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. SGR: an online genomic resource for the woodland strawberry
- Author
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Courtney A. Hollender, Janet P. Slovin, Omar Darwish, Chunying Kang, Sam Houston, Aviva Geretz, Zhongchi Liu, and Nadim W. Alkharouf
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,RNA-Seq ,Genomics ,Computational biology ,Genome browser ,Flowers ,Plant Science ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,Strawberry ,Fragaria ,Database ,03 medical and health sciences ,Woodland Strawberry ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Botany ,Databases, Genetic ,Rosaceae ,030304 developmental biology ,Synteny ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,Internet ,gBrowse ,Computational Biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Gene Annotation ,biology.organism_classification ,Fruit ,RNA-seq ,Transcriptome ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Background: Fragaria vesca, a diploid strawberry species commonly known as the alpine or woodland strawberry, is a versatile experimental plant system and an emerging model for the Rosaceae family. An ancestral F. vesca genome contributed to the genome of the octoploid dessert strawberry (F. ×ananassa), and the extant genome exhibits synteny with other commercially important members of the Rosaceae family such as apple and peach. To provide a molecular description of floral organ and fruit development at the resolution of specific tissues and cell types, RNAs from flowers and early developmental stage fruit tissues of the inbred F. vesca line YW5AF7 were extracted and the resulting cDNA libraries sequenced using an Illumina HiSeq2000. To enable easy access as well as mining of this two-dimensional (stage and tissue) transcriptome dataset, a web-based database, the Strawberry Genomic Resource (SGR), was developed. Description: SGR is a web accessible database that contains sample description, sample statistics, gene annotation, and gene expression analysis. This information can be accessed publicly from a web-based interface at http://bioinformatics.towson.edu/strawberry/Default.aspx. The SGR website provides user friendly search and browse capabilities for all the data stored in the database. Users are able to search for genes using a gene ID or description or obtain differentially expressed genes by entering different comparison parameters. Search results can be downloaded in a tabular format compatible with Microsoft excel application. Aligned reads to individual genes and exon/intron structures are displayed using the genome browser, facilitating gene re-annotation by individual users. Conclusions: The SGR database was developed to facilitate dissemination and data mining of extensive floral and fruit transcriptome data in the woodland strawberry. It enables users to mine the data in different ways to study different pathways or biological processes during reproductive development.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Single-cell analyses reveal that monocyte gene expression profiles influence HIV-1 reservoir size in acutely treated cohorts.
- Author
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Ehrenberg PK, Geretz A, Volcic M, Izumi T, Yum L, Waickman A, Shangguan S, Paquin-Proulx D, Creegan M, Bose M, Machmach K, McGraw A, Narahari A, Currier JR, Sacdalan C, Phanuphak N, Apps R, Corley M, Ndhlovu LC, Slike B, Krebs SJ, Anonworanich J, Tovanabutra S, Robb ML, Eller MA, Laird GM, Cyktor J, Daar ES, Crowell TA, Mellors JW, Vasan S, Michael NL, Kirchhoff F, and Thomas R
- Abstract
Elimination of latent HIV-1 is a major goal of AIDS research but the host factors determining the size of these reservoirs are poorly understood. Here, we investigated whether differences in host gene expression modulate the size of the HIV-1 reservoir during suppressive ART. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from fourteen individuals initiating ART during acute infection who demonstrated effective viral suppression but varying magnitude of total HIV-1 DNA were characterized by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq). Differentially expressed genes and enriched pathways demonstrated increased monocyte activity in participants with undetectable HIV-1 reservoirs. IL1B expression in CD14+ monocytes showed the greatest fold difference. The inverse association of IL1B with reservoir size was validated in an independent cohort comprised of 38 participants with different genetic backgrounds and HIV-1 subtype infections, and further confirmed with intact proviral DNA assay (IPDA
® ) measurements of intact HIV-1 proviruses in a subset of the samples. Modeling interactions with cell population frequencies showed that monocyte IL1B expression associated inversely with reservoir size in the context of higher frequencies of central memory CD4+ T cells, implicating an indirect effect of IL1B via the cell type well established to be a reservoir for persistent HIV-1. Signatures consisting of co-expressed genes including IL1B were highly enriched in the "TNFα signaling via NF-κB" geneset. Functional analyses in cell culture revealed that IL1B activates NF-κB, thereby promoting productive HIV-1 infection while simultaneously suppressing viral spread, suggesting a natural latency reversing activity to deplete the reservoir in ART treated individuals. Altogether, unbiased high throughput scRNA-seq analyses revealed that monocyte IL1B variation could decrease HIV-1 proviral reservoirs in individuals initiating ART during acute infection.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Long-term antiretroviral therapy initiated in acute HIV infection prevents residual dysfunction of HIV-specific CD8 + T cells.
- Author
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Takata H, Kakazu JC, Mitchell JL, Kroon E, Colby DJ, Sacdalan C, Bai H, Ehrenberg PK, Geretz A, Buranapraditkun S, Pinyakorn S, Intasan J, Tipsuk S, Suttichom D, Prueksakaew P, Chalermchai T, Chomchey N, Phanuphak N, de Souza M, Michael NL, Robb ML, Haddad EK, Crowell TA, Vasan S, Valcour VG, Douek DC, Thomas R, Rolland M, Chomont N, Ananworanich J, and Trautmann L
- Subjects
- CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Disease Progression, Humans, Viral Load, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections metabolism, HIV-1 physiology
- Abstract
Background: Harnessing CD8
+ T cell responses is being explored to achieve HIV remission. Although HIV-specific CD8+ T cells become dysfunctional without treatment, antiretroviral therapy (ART) partially restores their function. However, the extent of this recovery under long-term ART is less understood., Methods: We analyzed the differentiation status and function of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells after long-term ART initiated in acute or chronic HIV infection ex vivo and upon in vitro recall., Findings: ART initiation in any stage of acute HIV infection promoted the persistence of long-lived HIV-specific CD8+ T cells with high expansion (P<0·0008) and cytotoxic capacity (P=0·02) after in vitro recall, albeit at low cell number (P=0·003). This superior expansion capacity correlated with stemness (r=0·90, P=0·006), measured by TCF-1 expression, similar to functional HIV-specific CD8+ T cells found in spontaneous controllers. Importanly, TCF-1 expression in these cells was associated with longer time to viral rebound ranging from 13 to 48 days after ART interruption (r =0·71, P=0·03). In contrast, ART initiation in chronic HIV infection led to more differentiated HIV-specific CD8+ T cells lacking stemness properties and exhibiting residual dysfunction upon recall, with reduced proliferation and cytolytic activity., Interpretation: ART initiation in acute HIV infection preserves functional HIV-specific CD8+ T cells, albeit at numbers too low to control viral rebound post-ART. HIV remission strategies may need to boost HIV-specific CD8+ T cell numbers and induce stem cell-like properties to reverse the residual dysfunction persisting on ART in people treated after acute infection prior to ART release., Funding: U.S. National Institutes of Health and U.S. Department of Defense., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests All the other authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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