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Cancer is one of the most serious global diseases. We have focused on cancer immunoprevention. My thesis projects include developing a prophylactic primary and metastatic cancer vaccines, early cancer detection and investigation of genes involved in tumor development. These studies were focused on frame-shift (FS) antigens. The FS antigens are

Cancer is one of the most serious global diseases. We have focused on cancer immunoprevention. My thesis projects include developing a prophylactic primary and metastatic cancer vaccines, early cancer detection and investigation of genes involved in tumor development. These studies were focused on frame-shift (FS) antigens. The FS antigens are generated by genomic mutations or abnormal RNA processing, which cause a portion of a normal protein to be translated out of frame. The concept of the prophylactic cancer vaccine is to develop a general cancer vaccine that could prevent healthy people from developing different types of cancer. We have discovered a set of cancer specific FS antigens. One of the FS candidates, structural maintenance of chromosomes protein 1A (SMC1A) FS, could start to accumulate at early stages of tumor and be specifically exposed to the immune system by tumor cells. Prophylactic immunization with SMC1A-FS could significantly inhibit primary tumor development in different murine tumor models and also has the potential to inhibit tumor metastasis. The SMC1A-FS transcript was detected in the plasma of the 4T1/BALB/c mouse tumor model. The tumor size was correlated with the transcript ratio of the SMC1A-FS verses the WT in plasma, which could be measured by regular RT-PCR. This unique cancer biomarker has a practical potential for a large population cancer screen, as well as clinical tumor monitoring. With a set of mimotope peptides, antibodies against SMC1A-FS peptide were detected in different cancer patients, including breast cancer, pancreas cancer and lung cancer with a 53.8%, 56.5% and 12.5% positive rate respectively. This suggested that the FS antibody could be a biomarker for early cancer detection. The characterization of SMC1A suggested that: First, the deficiency of the SMC1A is common in different tumors and able to promote tumor initiation and development; second, the FS truncated protein may have nucleolus function in normal cells. Mis-control of this protein may promote tumor development. In summary, we developed a systematic general cancer prevention strategy through the variety immunological and molecular methods. The results gathered suggest the SMC1A-FS may be useful for the detection and prevention of cancer.
ContributorsShen, Luhui (Author) / Johnston, Stephen Albert (Thesis advisor) / Chang, Yung (Committee member) / Miller, Laurence (Committee member) / Sykes, Kathryn (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
The advent of new high throughput technology allows for increasingly detailed characterization of the immune system in healthy, disease, and age states. The immune system is composed of two main branches: the innate and adaptive immune system, though the border between these two states is appearing less distinct. The adaptive

The advent of new high throughput technology allows for increasingly detailed characterization of the immune system in healthy, disease, and age states. The immune system is composed of two main branches: the innate and adaptive immune system, though the border between these two states is appearing less distinct. The adaptive immune system is further split into two main categories: humoral and cellular immunity. The humoral immune response produces antibodies against specific targets, and these antibodies can be used to learn about disease and normal states. In this document, I use antibodies to characterize the immune system in two ways: 1. I determine the Antibody Status (AbStat) from the data collected from applying sera to an array of non-natural sequence peptides, and demonstrate that this AbStat measure can distinguish between disease, normal, and aged samples as well as produce a single AbStat number for each sample; 2. I search for antigens for use in a cancer vaccine, and this search results in several candidates as well as a new hypothesis. Antibodies provide us with a powerful tool for characterizing the immune system, and this natural tool combined with emerging technologies allows us to learn more about healthy and disease states.
ContributorsWhittemore, Kurt (Author) / Sykes, Kathryn (Thesis advisor) / Johnston, Stephen A. (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Stafford, Phillip (Committee member) / Stout, Valerie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Peptide microarrays are to proteomics as sequencing is to genomics. As microarrays become more content-rich, higher resolution proteomic studies will parallel deep sequencing of nucleic acids. Antigen-antibody interactions can be studied at a much higher resolution using microarrays than was possible only a decade ago. My dissertation focuses on testing

Peptide microarrays are to proteomics as sequencing is to genomics. As microarrays become more content-rich, higher resolution proteomic studies will parallel deep sequencing of nucleic acids. Antigen-antibody interactions can be studied at a much higher resolution using microarrays than was possible only a decade ago. My dissertation focuses on testing the feasibility of using either the Immunosignature platform, based on non-natural peptide sequences, or a pathogen peptide microarray, which uses bioinformatically-selected peptides from pathogens for creating sensitive diagnostics. Both diagnostic applications use relatively little serum from infected individuals, but each approaches diagnosis of disease differently. The first project compares pathogen epitope peptide (life-space) and non-natural (random-space) peptide microarrays while using them for the early detection of Coccidioidomycosis (Valley Fever). The second project uses NIAID category A, B and C priority pathogen epitope peptides in a multiplexed microarray platform to assess the feasibility of using epitope peptides to simultaneously diagnose multiple exposures using a single assay. Cross-reactivity is a consistent feature of several antigen-antibody based immunodiagnostics. This work utilizes microarray optimization and bioinformatic approaches to distill the underlying disease specific antibody signature pattern. Circumventing inherent cross-reactivity observed in antibody binding to peptides was crucial to achieve the goal of this work to accurately distinguishing multiple exposures simultaneously.
ContributorsNavalkar, Krupa Arun (Author) / Johnston, Stephen A. (Thesis advisor) / Stafford, Phillip (Thesis advisor) / Sykes, Kathryn (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Vaccination remains one of the most effective means for preventing infectious diseases. During viral infection, activated CD8 T cells differentiate into cytotoxic effector cells that directly kill infected cells and produce anti-viral cytokines. Further T cell differentiation results in a population of memory CD8 T cells that have the ability

Vaccination remains one of the most effective means for preventing infectious diseases. During viral infection, activated CD8 T cells differentiate into cytotoxic effector cells that directly kill infected cells and produce anti-viral cytokines. Further T cell differentiation results in a population of memory CD8 T cells that have the ability to self-renew and rapidly proliferate into effector cells during secondary infections. However during persistent viral infection, T cell differentiation is disrupted due to sustained antigen stimulation resulting in a loss of T cell effector function. Despite the development of vaccines for a wide range of viral diseases, efficacious vaccines for persistent viral infections have been challenging to design. Immunization against virus T cell epitopes has been proposed as an alternative vaccination strategy for persistent viral infections, such as HIV. However, vaccines that selectively engage T cell responses can result in inappropriate immune responses that increase, rather than prevent, disease. Quantitative models of virus infection and immune response were used to investigate how virus and immune system variables influence pathogenic versus protective T cell responses generated during persistent viral infection. It was determined that an intermediate precursor frequency of virus-specific memory CD8 T cells prior to LCMV infection resulted in maximum T cell mediated pathology. Increased pathology was independent of antigen sensitivity or the diversity of TCR in the CD8 T cell response, but was dependent on CD8 T cell production of TNF and the magnitude of initial virus exposure. The threshold for exhaustion of responding CD8 T cells ultimately influences the precursor frequency that causes enhanced disease.In addition, viral infection can occur in the context of co-infection by heterologous pathogens that modulate immune responses and/or disease. Co-infection of two unrelated viruses in their natural host, Ectromelia virus (ECTV) and Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection in mice, were studied. ECTV infection can be a lethal infection in mice due in part to the blockade of antiviral cytokines, including Type I Interferons (IFN-I). It was determined that ECTV/LCMV co-infection results in decreased ECTV viral load and amelioration of ECTV-induced disease, presumably due to IFN-I induction by LCMV. However, immune responses to LCMV in ECTV co-infected mice were also lower compared to mice infected with LCMV alone and biased toward effector-memory cell generation. Thus, providing evidence for bi-directional effects of viral co-infection that modulate disease and immunity. Together the results suggest heterogeneity in T cell responses during vaccination with viral vectors may be in part due to heterologous virus infection or vaccine usage and that TNF-blockade may be useful for minimizing pathology while maintaining protection during virus infection. Lastly, quantitative mathematical models of virus and T cell immunity can be useful to generate predictions regarding which molecular and cellular pathways mediate T cell protection versus pathology.
ContributorsMcAfee, Megan (Author) / Blattman, Joseph N (Thesis advisor) / Anderson, Karen (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Hogue, Brenda (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Vaccinia virus is a cytoplasmic, double-stranded DNA orthopoxvirus. Unlike mammalian cells, vaccinia virus produces double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) during its viral life cycle. The protein kinase R, PKR, is one of the principal host defense mechanisms against orthopoxvirus infection. PKR can bind double-stranded RNA and phosphorylate eukaryotic translation initiation factor, eIF2α,

Vaccinia virus is a cytoplasmic, double-stranded DNA orthopoxvirus. Unlike mammalian cells, vaccinia virus produces double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) during its viral life cycle. The protein kinase R, PKR, is one of the principal host defense mechanisms against orthopoxvirus infection. PKR can bind double-stranded RNA and phosphorylate eukaryotic translation initiation factor, eIF2α, shutting down protein synthesis and halting the viral life cycle. To combat host defenses, vaccinia virus encodes E3, a potent inhibitor of the cellular anti-viral eIF2α kinase, PKR. The E3 protein contains a C-terminal dsRNA-binding motif that sequesters dsRNA and inhibits PKR activation. We demonstrate that E3 also interacts with PKR by co-immunoprecipitation. This interaction is independent of the presence of dsRNA and dsRNA-binding by E3, indicating that the interaction is not due to dsRNA-bridging.
PKR interaction mapped to a region within the dsRNA-binding domain of E3 and overlapped with sequences in the C-terminus of this domain that are necessary for binding to dsRNA. Point mutants of E3 were generated and screened for PKR inhibition and direct interaction. Analysis of these mutants demonstrates that dsRNA-binding but not PKR interaction plays a critical role in the broad host range of VACV. Nonetheless, full inhibition of PKR in cells in culture requires both dsRNA-binding and PKR interaction. Because E3 is highly conserved among orthopoxviruses, understanding the mechanisms that E3 uses to inhibit PKR can give insight into host range pathogenesis of dsRNA producing viruses.
ContributorsFoster, Clayton (Co-author) / Alattar, Hamed (Co-author) / Jacobs, Bertram (Thesis director) / Blattman, Joseph (Committee member) / McFadden, Grant (Committee member) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / W. P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / Department of Psychology (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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Description
Protein folding is essential in all cells, and misfolded proteins cause many diseases. In the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli, protein folding must be carefully controlled during envelope biogenesis to maintain an effective permeability barrier between the cell and its environment. This study explores the relationship between envelope biogenesis

Protein folding is essential in all cells, and misfolded proteins cause many diseases. In the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli, protein folding must be carefully controlled during envelope biogenesis to maintain an effective permeability barrier between the cell and its environment. This study explores the relationship between envelope biogenesis and cell stress, and the return to homeostasis during envelope stress. A major player in envelope biogenesis and stress response is the periplasmic protease DegP. Work presented here explores the growth phenotypes of cells lacking degP, including temperature sensitivity and lowered cell viability. Intriguingly, these cells also accumulate novel cytosolic proteins in their envelope not present in wild-type. Association of novel proteins was found to be growth time- and temperature-dependent, and was reversible, suggesting a dynamic nature of the envelope stress response. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of envelopes followed by mass spectrometry identified numerous cytoplasmic proteins, including the elongation factor/chaperone TufA, illuminating a novel cytoplasmic response to envelope stress. A suppressor of temperature sensitivity was characterized which corrects the defect caused by the lack of degP. Through random Tn10 insertion analysis, aribitrarily-primed polymerase chain reaction and three-factor cross, the suppressor was identified as a novel duplication-truncation of rpoE, here called rpoE'. rpoE' serves to subtly increase RpoE levels in the cell, resulting in a slight elevation of the SigmaE stress response. It does so without significantly affecting steady-state levels of outer membrane proteins, but rather by increasing proteolysis in the envelope independently of DegP. A multicopy suppressor of temperature sensitivity in strains lacking degP and expressing mutant OmpC proteins, yfgC, was characterized. Bioinformatics suggests that YfgC is a metalloprotease, and mutation of conserved domains resulted in mislocalization of the protein. yfgC-null mutants displayed additive antibiotic sensitivity and growth defects when combined with null mutation in another periplasmic chaperone, surA, suggesting that the two act in separate pathways during envelope biogenesis. Overexpression of YfgC6his altered steady-state levels of mutant OmpC in the envelope, showing a direct relationship between it and a major constituent of the envelope. Curiously, purified YfgC6his showed an increased propensity for crosslinking in mutant, but not in a wild-type, OmpC background.
ContributorsLeiser, Owen Paul (Author) / Misra, Rajeev (Thesis advisor) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Chang, Yung (Committee member) / Stout, Valerie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2010
Description
Lung metastatic cancers represent a major challenge in both basic and clinical cancer research. The ability to treat lung metastases to date has been challenging, current treatment paradigms are a mix of classic radiotherapy, chemotherapies and tumor-targeted therapies, with no one treatment that is effective for all tumors. Oncolytic viruses

Lung metastatic cancers represent a major challenge in both basic and clinical cancer research. The ability to treat lung metastases to date has been challenging, current treatment paradigms are a mix of classic radiotherapy, chemotherapies and tumor-targeted therapies, with no one treatment that is effective for all tumors. Oncolytic viruses (OVs) represent a new therapeutic modality for hard-to-treat tumors. However, major questions still exist in the field, especially around how to therapeutically arm and deliver OVs to sites of disseminated tumors. To address this need, oncolytic myxoma viruses (MYXV) that expresses TNF superfamily member transgenes (vMYX-hTNF or vMyx-mLIGHT) were tested in an immunocompetent syngeneic lung metastatic murine osteosarcoma model. Three versions of this model were used; 1-an early intervention model, 2-an established tumor model, defined by both average tumor burden and failure of anti-PD-L1 and vMyx-TNF monotherapies, and 3-a late-stage disease model, defined by the failure the combination of vMyx-hTNF/PBMCs and anti-PD-L1 therapy. These three models were designed to test different questions about therapeutic efficacy of armed MYXV and delivery of MYXV to lung metastases. In the early intervention model, vMyx-hTNF was found to be an effective therapy, especially when delivered by leukocyte carrier cells (either bone marrow or PBMCs). Next, the combination of immune checkpoint inhibitors, including anti-PD-L1, anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4, with vMyx-TNF/PBMCs were found to increase efficacy in treated mice compared to monotherapies. The established model was used to test potential synergy of vMyx-hTNF with anti-PD-L1 therapy. This model was defined by the failure of the monotherapies, however, in combination, treated mice survived significantly longer, and had lower average tumor burden throughout. This model was also used to test tumor specific delivery using ex vivo loaded PBMCs as carrier cells. Using MYXV expressing Tdtomato, PBMCs were found to deliver MYXV to tumors more effectively than free virus. In the most stringent late-stage disease model, vMyx-mLIGHT/PBMCs and vMyx-mLIGHT/PBMCs plus anti-PD-1 were tested and found to be efficacious where combination vMyx-TNF/PBMCs plus PD-1 failed. These results taken together show that TNFSF arming of MYXV, especially when delivered by autologous PBMCs, represents a new potential treatment strategy for lung metastatic tumors.
ContributorsChristie, John Douglas (Author) / McFadden, Grant (Thesis advisor) / Blattman, Joseph (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Anderson, Karen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Anoxia tolerance is strongly correlated with tolerance to heat, desiccation, hyperosmotic shock, freezing, and other general stressors, suggesting that anoxia tolerance is broadly related to stress tolerance. Age affects the capacity of many animals to survive anoxia, but the basis to this ontogenic variation is poorly understood. We exposed adult

Anoxia tolerance is strongly correlated with tolerance to heat, desiccation, hyperosmotic shock, freezing, and other general stressors, suggesting that anoxia tolerance is broadly related to stress tolerance. Age affects the capacity of many animals to survive anoxia, but the basis to this ontogenic variation is poorly understood. We exposed adult Drosophila, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 12 days past eclosion, to six hours of anoxia and assessed survival 24-hours post-treatment. Survival of anoxia declined strongly with age (from 80% survival for one-day-old flies to 10% survival for 12 day-old-flies), a surprising result since adult fly senescence in Drosophila is usually observed much later. In anoxia, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels declined rapidly (< 30 min) to near-zero levels in both 1 and 12-day old adults; thus the higher anoxia-tolerance of young adults is not due to a better capacity to keep ATP elevated. Relatively few physiological parameters are reported to change over this age range in D. melanogaster, but gut bacterial content increases strongly. As a partial test for a causal link between bacterial load and anoxia tolerance, we replaced food daily, every third day, or every sixth day, and assayed survival of six hours of anoxia and bacterial load at 12 days of age. Anoxia tolerance for 12-day old flies was improved by more food changes and was strongly and negatively affected by bacterial load. These data suggest that increasing bacterial load may play an important role in the age-related decline of anoxia tolerance in Drosophila.
ContributorsSargent, James (Author) / Harrison, Jon F. (Thesis advisor) / Haydel, Shelly (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Z-DNA binding protein 1 (ZBP1) is an interferon-inducible protein that plays a crucial role in antiviral defense by recognizing Z-form nucleic acid (Z-NA), a left-handed conformer of double-stranded DNA/RNA. When ZBP1 binds to Z-NA, it can trigger programmed cell death pathways, including apoptosis and necroptosis, in collaboration with receptor interacting

Z-DNA binding protein 1 (ZBP1) is an interferon-inducible protein that plays a crucial role in antiviral defense by recognizing Z-form nucleic acid (Z-NA), a left-handed conformer of double-stranded DNA/RNA. When ZBP1 binds to Z-NA, it can trigger programmed cell death pathways, including apoptosis and necroptosis, in collaboration with receptor interacting protein kinases 1 and 3 (RIPK1 and RIPK3). Z-NA positive viruses including poxviruses and influenza A virus (IAV) activate ZBP1-dependent cell death during replication. Little is known whether ZBP1 plays any role during Z-NA negative virus infection. Doxycycline-inducible A549 ACE2 Tet-On cells were constructed to express ZBP1 and were infected with Z-NA negative viruses. ZBP1-expressing cells infected with Sindbis virus (SINV), La Crosse virus (LACV), Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) and human coronavirus OC43 (hCoV-OC43) underwent extensive cell death, which could be rescued by a caspase inhibitor but not by JAK1/2 or RIPK1 kinase inhibitors. However, cell death was not observed upon Zika virus (ZIKV), Encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV), Chikungunya virus (CHKV) or human coronavirus 229E (hCoV-229E) infection. ZBP1 expression did not impact the replication of all tested viruses. In addition, ZBP1-mediated cell death during infection depends on the Zα2 and RHIM1 domains and partially on the C-terminal domain. These findings suggest that Z-NA can be detected by the Zα2 domain to initiate cell death pathways during infection with some Z-NA negative viruses and that the RHIM1/C-terminal domains are necessary for ZBP1-induced cell death. Further research is needed to determine the Z-NA ligand and the precise mechanism of ZBP1-mediated antiviral responses and how they can be exploited for the development of novel antiviral therapies.
ContributorsLa Rosa, Bruno Andres (Author) / Li, Yize (Thesis advisor) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Hogue, Brenda (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023