8 results on '"Lee, Richard W. J."'
Search Results
2. Glucocorticoid treatment in patients with newly diagnosed immune thrombocytopenia switches CD14++CD16+ intermediate monocytes from a pro‐inflammatory to an anti‐inflammatory phenotype.
- Author
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Williams, Emily L., Stimpson, Madeleine L., Lait, Philippa J. P., Schewitz‐Bowers, Lauren P., Jones, Lauren V., Dhanda, Ashwin D., Lee, Richard W. J., and Bradbury, Charlotte A.
- Subjects
IDIOPATHIC thrombocytopenic purpura ,PHENOTYPES ,MONOCYTES ,INTERFERON gamma ,T cells ,MOLLUSCUM contagiosum ,BLOOD platelet disorders - Abstract
Summary: Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is thought to result from an aberrant adaptive autoimmune response, involving autoantibodies, B and T lymphocytes, directed at platelets and megakaryocytes. Previous reports have demonstrated skewed CD4+ T‐helper subset distribution and enhanced production of pro‐inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin 17A and interferon gamma. The role of monocytes (MCs) in ITP is less widely described, but innate immune cells have a role in shaping CD4+ T‐cell phenotypes. Glucocorticoids (GCs) are commonly used for first‐line ITP treatment and modulate a broad range of immune cells including T cells and MCs. Using multiparameter flow cytometry analysis, we demonstrate the expansion of intermediate MCs (CD14++CD16+) in untreated patients with newly diagnosed ITP, with these cells displaying a pro‐inflammatory phenotype, characterised by enhanced expression of CD64 and CD80. After 2 weeks of prednisolone treatment (1 mg/kg daily), the proportion of intermediate MCs reduced, with enhanced expression of the anti‐inflammatory markers CD206 and CD163. Healthy control MCs were distinctly different than MCs from patients with ITP before and after GC treatment. Furthermore, the GC‐induced phenotype was not observed in patients with chronic ITP receiving thrombopoietin receptor agonists. These data suggest a role of MCs in ITP pathogenesis and clinical response to GC therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Ex Vivo T Cell Cytokine Expression Predicts Survival in Patients with Severe Alcoholic Hepatitis.
- Author
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Dhanda, Ashwin D., Yates, Euan, Schewitz-Bowers, Lauren P., Lait, Philippa J., Lee, Richard W. J., and Cramp, Matthew E.
- Subjects
T cells ,ALANINE aminotransferase ,ASPARTATE aminotransferase ,HEPATITIS ,PROTEIN analysis - Abstract
Alcoholic hepatitis (AH) is an acute inflammatory liver condition with high early mortality rate. Steroids improve shortterm survival but nonresponders have the worst outcomes. There is a clinical need to identify these high-risk individuals at the time of presentation. T cells are implicated in AH and steroid responsiveness. We measured ex vivo T cell cytokine expression as a candidate biomarker of outcomes in patients with AH. Consecutive patients (bilirubin >80 μmol/L and ratio of aspartate aminotransferase to alanine aminotransferase >1.5 who were heavy alcohol consumers with discriminant function [DF] ≥32), were recruited from University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust. T cells were obtained and stimulated ex vivo. Cytokine expression levels were determined by flow cytometry and protein multiplex analysis. Twenty-three patients were recruited (10 male; median age 51 years; baseline DF 67; 30% 90-day mortality). Compared to T cells from nonsurvivors at day 90, T cells from survivors had higher baseline baseline intracellular interleukin (IL)-10:IL-17A ratio (0.43 vs 1.20, p=0.02). Multiplex protein analysis identified interferon γ (IFNγ) and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) as independent predictors of 90-day mortality (p=0.04, p=0.01, respectively). The ratio of IFNγ to TNF-α was predictive of 90-day mortality (1.4 vs 0.2, p=0.03). These data demonstrate the potential utility of T cell cytokine release assays performed on pretreatment blood samples as biomarkers of survival in patients with severe AH. Our key findings were that intracellular IL- 10:IL-17A and IFNγ:TNF-α in culture supernatants were predictors of 90-day mortality. This offers the promise of developing T cell-based diagnostic tools for risk stratification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Human Th17 cells produce a soluble mediator that increases podocyte motility via signaling pathways that mimic PAR-1 activation.
- Author
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May, Carl J., Welsh, Gavin I., Chesor, Musleeha, Lait, Phillipa J., Schewitz-Bowers, Lauren P., Lee, Richard W. J., and Saleem, Moin A.
- Subjects
CELL culture ,CELLS ,NEPHROTIC syndrome ,T cells ,PROTEASE inhibitors - Abstract
The specific pathogenesis of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (NS) is poorly understood, and the role of immune mediators remains contentious. However, there is good evidence for the role of a circulating factor, and we recently postulated circulating proteases as candidate factors. Immunosuppressive therapy with glucocorticoids (GCs) and T cell inhibitors are widely used in the clinical treatment of NS. Given that T helper (CD4
+ ) cells expressing IL-17A (so-called Th17 cells) have recently been reported to be resistant to GC treatment, and GC resistance remains a major challenge in the management of NS, we hypothesized that Th17 cells produce a circulating factor that is capable of signaling to the podocyte and inducing deleterious phenotypic changes. To test this, we generated human Th17 cells from healthy volunteers and added the supernatants from these T cell cultures to conditionally immortalized human podocytes in vitro. This demonstrated that podocytes treated with Th17 cell culture supernatant, as well as with patient disease plasma, showed significant stimulation of JNK and p38 MAPK pathways and an increase in motility, which was blocked using a JNK inhibitor. We have previously shown that nephrotic plasma elicits a podocyte response via protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR-1). Stimulation of PAR-1 inpodocytes elicited the same signaling response as Th17 cell culture supernatant treatment. Equally, protease inhibitors with Th17 cell culture treatment blocked the signaling response. This was not replicated by the reagents added to Th17 cell cultures or by IL-17A. Hence, we conclude that an undefined soluble mediator produced by Th17 cells mimics the deleterious effect of PAR-1 activation in vitro. Given the association between pathogenic subsets of Th17 cells and GC resistance, these observations have potential therapeutic relevance for patients with NS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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5. The DNA Methylation Inhibitor Zebularine Controls CD4+ T Cell Mediated Intraocular Inflammation.
- Author
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Zou, Yanli, Hu, Xiao, Schewitz-Bowers, Lauren P., Stimpson, Madeleine, Miao, Li, Ge, Xiaofei, Yang, Liu, Li, Yan, Bible, Paul W., Wen, Xiaofeng, Li, Jing Jing, Liu, Yizhi, Lee, Richard W. J., and Wei, Lai
- Subjects
T cells ,DNA methylation ,INFLAMMATION ,ADRENOCORTICAL hormones ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents ,UVEITIS - Abstract
CD4
+ T cell mediated uveitis is conventionally treated with systemic immunosuppressive agents, including corticosteroids and biologics targeting key inflammatory cytokines. However, their long-term utility is limited due to various side effects. Here, we investigated whether DNA methylation inhibitor zebularine can target CD4+ T cells and control intraocular inflammation. Our results showed that zebularine restrained the expression of inflammatory cytokines IFN-γ and IL-17 in both human and murine CD4+ T cells in vitro. Importantly, it also significantly alleviated intraocular inflammation and retinal tissue damage in the murine experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU) model in vivo , suggesting that the DNA methylation inhibitor zebularine is a candidate new therapeutic agent for uveitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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6. CytoBinning: Immunological insights from multi-dimensional data.
- Author
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Shen, Yang, Chaigne-Delalande, Benjamin, Lee, Richard W. J., and Losert, Wolfgang
- Subjects
FLOW cytometry ,SPECTROPHOTOMETRY ,DATA acquisition systems ,DIMENSIONAL reduction algorithms ,CYTOPHOTOMETRY - Abstract
New cytometric techniques continue to push the boundaries of multi-parameter quantitative data acquisition at the single-cell level particularly in immunology and medicine. Sophisticated analysis methods for such ever higher dimensional datasets are rapidly emerging, with advanced data representations and dimensional reduction approaches. However, these are not yet standardized and clinical scientists and cell biologists are not yet experienced in their interpretation. More fundamentally their range of statistical validity is not yet fully established. We therefore propose a new method for the automated and unbiased analysis of high-dimensional single cell datasets that is simple and robust, with the goal of reducing this complex information into a familiar 2D scatter plot representation that is of immediate utility to a range of biomedical and clinical settings. Using publicly available flow cytometry and mass cytometry datasets we demonstrate that this method (termed CytoBinning), recapitulates the results of traditional manual cytometric analyses and leads to new and testable hypotheses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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7. Glucocorticoids and the emerging importance of T cell subsets in steroid refractory diseases.
- Author
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Schewitz, Lauren P., Lee, Richard W. J., Dayan, Colin M., and Dick, Andrew D.
- Abstract
Glucocorticoids remain the first-line treatment for a range of autoimmune and allergic diseases. However, 30% of patients fail to achieve disease control at tolerable systemic doses and continue to have an increased immune response with poor clinical outcome. This steroid refractory (SR) phenotype has previously been attributed to enhanced expression of inactive glucocorticoid receptor isoforms and cytokine-mediated suppression of glucocorticoid (GC) signaling, in particular by interleukin-2. These mechanisms are discussed, with emphasis on recent evidence for the role of the CD4+CD25intand GC-induced T regulatory cell subsets in perpetrating SR disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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8. Intermediate Monocytes in Acute Alcoholic Hepatitis Are Functionally Activated and Induce IL-17 Expression in CD4+ T Cells.
- Author
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Dhanda, Ashwin D., Williams, Emily L., Yates, Euan, Lait, Philippa J. P., Schewitz-Bowers, Lauren P., Hegazy, Doha, Cramp, Matthew E., Collins, Peter L., and Lee, Richard W. J.
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T cells , *MONOCYTES , *HEPATITIS , *CELL membranes , *IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents - Abstract
In humans, the three main circulating monocyte subsets are defined by their relative cell surface expression of CD14 and CD16. They are all challenging to study because their characteristics are strongly context specific, and this has led to a range of conflicting reports about their function, which is especially so for CD14++CD16+ (intermediate) monocytes. Ex vivo cultures are also often confounded by the concomitant use of immunosuppressive drugs. We therefore sought to characterize the phenotype and function of intermediate monocytes in the setting of acute inflammation prior to treatment in a cohort of 41 patients with acute alcoholic hepatitis (AH). Circulating intermediate monocytes were enriched in patients with AH and had an activated phenotype with enhanced expression of CCR2 and CD206 compared with healthy controls. Proinflammatory cytokine expression, including IL-1β and IL-23, was also higher than in healthy controls, but both classical (CD14++CD16-) and intermediate monocytes in AH were refractory to TLR stimulation. Compared with healthy controls, both AH monocyte subsets had greater phagocytic capacity, enhanced ability to drive memory T cell proliferation in coculture, and skewed CD4+ T cells to express an increased ratio of IL-17/IFN-γ. Furthermore, liver tissue from AH patients demonstrated an enrichment of monocytes including the intermediate subset compared with controls. These data demonstrate that intermediate monocytes are expanded, functionally activated, induce CD4+ T cell IL-17 expression, and are enriched in the liver of patients with AH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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