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Description
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) suppress adaptive immunity and inflammation. In cancer, Tregs hinder therapeutic responses due to suppression of anti-tumor activity in the tumor microenvironment. Although these cells play a role in suppressing anti-tumor responses, development of therapeutics that target Tregs is limited by their low abundance, heterogeneity, and lack

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) suppress adaptive immunity and inflammation. In cancer, Tregs hinder therapeutic responses due to suppression of anti-tumor activity in the tumor microenvironment. Although these cells play a role in suppressing anti-tumor responses, development of therapeutics that target Tregs is limited by their low abundance, heterogeneity, and lack of specific cell surface markers. To study Treg mechanisms of suppression, a human T cell line, MoT, was identified and characterized as a model of human Foxp3+ Tregs. MoT cells express surface markers consistent with PBMC-derived Tregs and inhibit proliferation of CD4+ responder PBMCs in a ratio-dependent manner. Transwell membrane separation prevented suppression of stimulated CD4+ PBMC proliferation by MoT cells, suggesting cell-cell contact is required for suppressive activity. Suppression was found to be independent of soluble cytokines and known immune checkpoint pathways, providing evidence that a Foxp3+ Treg population suppresses immune responses by an unknown cell contact-dependent mechanism. To investigate potential cell surface molecules that mediate suppression, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were generated to a known immunosuppressive protein, Galectin-1, and to MoT cell surface proteins. MAbs were identified that bind and functionally block suppressive activity. Another mechanism of immune suppression involves the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway, which is exploited by tumor cells to resist T cell killing and escape immune clearance. Since PD-L1 has emerged as an effective therapeutic target, anti-PD-L1 CAR T cells were generated and demonstrated to kill PD-L1-positive tumor cells. These results expand upon the current knowledge of Treg function and CAR T cell therapy and may lead to enhanced anti-tumor immunity to improve patient responses.
ContributorsPfeffer, Kirsten (Author) / Lake, Douglas F (Thesis advisor) / Ho, Thai H (Committee member) / Hedin, Karen E (Committee member) / Rahman, Masmudur M (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Valley Fever (VF), is a potentially lethal fungal pneumonia caused by Coccidioides spp., which is estimated to cause ~15-30% of all community-acquired pneumonias in the highly endemic Greater Phoenix and Tucson areas of Arizona. However, an accurate antigen-based diagnostic is still lacking. In order to identify protein and glycan antigen

Valley Fever (VF), is a potentially lethal fungal pneumonia caused by Coccidioides spp., which is estimated to cause ~15-30% of all community-acquired pneumonias in the highly endemic Greater Phoenix and Tucson areas of Arizona. However, an accurate antigen-based diagnostic is still lacking. In order to identify protein and glycan antigen biomarkers of infection, I used a combination of genomics, proteomics and glycomics analyses to provide evidence of genus-specific proteins and glycosylations. The next goal was to determine if Coccidioides-specific glycans were present in biological samples from VF patients. Urine collected from 77 humans and 63 dogs were enriched for glycans and evaluated by mass spectrometry for Coccidioides-specific glycans and evaluated against a panel of normal donor urines, urines from patients infected with other fungi, and fungal cultures from closely related pneumonia-causing fungi. A combination of 6 glycan biomarkers was 100% sensitive and 100% specific in the diagnosis of human VF subjects, while only 3 glycan biomarkers were needed for 100% sensitivity and 100 specificity in the diagnosis of dog VF subject. Additionally, a blinded trial of 23 human urine samples was correctly able to classify urine samples with 93.3% sensitivity and 100% specificity. The results of this research provides evidence that Coccidioides genus-specific glycosylations have potential as antigens in diagnostic assays.
ContributorsMitchell, Natalie M (Author) / Lake, Douglas F (Thesis advisor) / Bean, Heather D (Committee member) / Grys, Thomas E (Committee member) / Magee, Dewey M (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Biomarkers find a wide variety of applications in oncology from risk assessment to diagnosis and predicting and monitoring recurrence and response to therapy. Developing clinically useful biomarkers for cancer is faced with several challenges, including cancer heterogeneity and factors related to assay development and biomarker performance. Circulating biomarkers offer a

Biomarkers find a wide variety of applications in oncology from risk assessment to diagnosis and predicting and monitoring recurrence and response to therapy. Developing clinically useful biomarkers for cancer is faced with several challenges, including cancer heterogeneity and factors related to assay development and biomarker performance. Circulating biomarkers offer a rapid, cost-effective, and minimally-invasive window to disease and are ideal for population-based screening. Circulating immune biomarkers are stable, measurable, and can betray the underlying antigen when present below detection levels or even no longer present. This dissertation aims to investigate potential circulating immune biomarkers with applications in cancer detection and novel therapies. Over 600,000 cancers each year are attributed to the human papillomavirus (HPV), including cervical, anogenital and oropharyngeal cancers. A key challenge in understanding HPV immunobiology and developing immune biomarkers is the diversity of HPV types and the need for multiplexed display of HPV antigens. In Project 1, nucleic acid programmable protein arrays displaying the proteomes of 12 HPV types were developed and used for serum immunoprofiling of women with cervical lesions or invasive cervical cancer. These arrays provide a valuable high-throughput tool for measuring the breadth, specificity, heterogeneity, and cross-reactivity of the serologic response to HPV. Project 2 investigates potential biomarkers of immunity to the bacterial CRISPR/Cas9 system that is currently in clinical trials for cancer. Pre-existing B cell and T cell immune responses to Cas9 were detected in humans and Cas9 was modified to eliminate immunodominant epitopes while preserving its function and specificity. This dissertation broadens our understanding of the immunobiology of cervical cancer and provides insights into the immune profiles that could serve as biomarkers of various applications in cancer.
ContributorsEwaisha, Radwa Mohamed Emadeldin Mahmoud (Author) / Anderson, Karen S (Thesis advisor) / LaBaer, Joshua (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas F (Committee member) / Stout, Valerie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
In the U.S., breast cancer (BC) incidences among African American (AA) and CA (CA) women are similar, yet AA women have a significantly higher mortality rate. In addition, AA women often present with tumors at a younger age, with a higher tumor grade/stage and are more likely to be diagnosed

In the U.S., breast cancer (BC) incidences among African American (AA) and CA (CA) women are similar, yet AA women have a significantly higher mortality rate. In addition, AA women often present with tumors at a younger age, with a higher tumor grade/stage and are more likely to be diagnosed with the highly aggressive triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) subtype. Even within the TNBC subtype, AA women have a worse clinical outcome compared to CA. Although multiple socio-economic and lifestyle factors may contribute to these observed health disparities, it is essential that the underlying biological differences between CA and AA TNBC are identified. In this study, gene expression profiling was performed on archived FFPE samples, obtained from CA and AA women diagnosed with early stage TNBC. Initial analysis revealed a pattern of differential expression in the AA cohort compared to CA. Further molecular characterization results showed that the AA cohort segregated into 3-TNBC molecular subtypes; Basal-like (BL2), Immunomodulatory (IM) and Mesenchymal (M). Gene expression analyses resulted in 190 differentially expressed genes between the AA and CA cohorts. Pathway enrichment analysis demonstrated that differentially expressed genes were over-represented in cytoskeletal remodeling, cell adhesion, tight junctions, and immune response in the AA TNBC -cohort. Furthermore, genes in the Wnt/β-catenin pathway were over-expressed. These results were validated using RT-qPCR on an independent cohort of FFPE samples from AA and CA women with early stage TNBC, and identified Caveolin-1 (CAV1) as being significantly expressed in the AA-TNBC cohort. Furthermore, CAV1 was shown to be highly expressed in a cell line panel of TNBC, in particular, those of the mesenchymal and basal-like molecular subtype. Finally, silencing of CAV1 expression by siRNA resulted in a significant decrease in proliferation in each of the TNBC cell lines. These observations suggest that CAV1 expression may contribute to the more aggressive phenotype observed in AA women diagnosed with TNBC.
ContributorsGetz, Julie (Author) / Baumbach-Reardon, Lisa L (Thesis advisor) / Lake, Douglas F (Thesis advisor) / Bussey, Kimberly (Committee member) / Kusumi, Kenro (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
CD8+ T-lymphocytes (CTLs) are central to the immunologic control of infections and are currently at the forefront of strategies that enhance immune based treatment of a variety of tumors. Effective T-cell based vaccines and immunotherapies fundamentally rely on the interaction of CTLs with peptide-human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA-I) complexes

CD8+ T-lymphocytes (CTLs) are central to the immunologic control of infections and are currently at the forefront of strategies that enhance immune based treatment of a variety of tumors. Effective T-cell based vaccines and immunotherapies fundamentally rely on the interaction of CTLs with peptide-human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA-I) complexes on the infected/malignant cell surface. However, how CTLs are able to respond to antigenic peptides with high specificity is largely unknown. Also unknown, are the different mechanisms underlying tumor immune evasion from CTL-mediated cytotoxicity. In this dissertation, I investigate the immunogenicity and dysfunction of CTLs for the development of novel T-cell therapies. Project 1 explores the biochemical hallmarks associated with HLA-I binding peptides that result in a CTL-immune response. The results reveal amino acid hydrophobicity of T-cell receptor (TCR) contact residues within immunogenic CTL-epitopes as a critical parameter for CTL-self
onself discrimination. Project 2 develops a bioinformatic and experimental methodology for the identification of CTL-epitopes from low frequency T-cells against tumor antigens and chronic viruses. This methodology is employed in Project 3 to identify novel immunogenic CTL-epitopes from human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated head and neck cancer patients. In Project 3, I further study the mechanisms of HPV-specific T-cell dysfunction, and I demonstrate that combination inhibition of Indoleamine 2, 3-dioxygenase (IDO-1) and programmed cell death protein (PD-1) can be a potential immunotherapy against HPV+ head and neck cancers. Lastly, in Project 4, I develop a single-cell assay for high-throughput identification of antigens targeted by CTLs from whole pathogenome libraries. Thus, this dissertation contributes to fundamental T-cell immunobiology by identifying rules of T-cell immunogenicity and dysfunction, as well as to translational immunology by identifying novel CTL-epitopes, and therapeutic targets for T-cell immunotherapy.
ContributorsKrishna, Sri (Author) / Anderson, Karen S (Thesis advisor) / LaBaer, Joshua (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram L (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas F (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
An estimated 267 million women worldwide are HSV-2 seropositive, including roughly 20% of reproductive-aged American women. HSV-2 is a neurotropic virus that establishes a persistent, life-long infection that increases risk for STI acquisition in individuals. The vaginal epithelium represents a critical first line of defense against infection, and during acute

An estimated 267 million women worldwide are HSV-2 seropositive, including roughly 20% of reproductive-aged American women. HSV-2 is a neurotropic virus that establishes a persistent, life-long infection that increases risk for STI acquisition in individuals. The vaginal epithelium represents a critical first line of defense against infection, and during acute infection, underlying immune mechanisms in the epithelium may be critical to protect against disease pathogenesis. The recently identified pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-36gamma has been shown to be expressed at mucosal epithelia, including the female reproductive tract (FRT) and may be an important factor in host defense. Although IL-36gamma has been shown to be induced in the FRT after exposure to microbial products, the contributions of IL-36gamma to host defense mechanisms in response to this clinically relevant STI pathogen are not well understood. This dissertation describes the regulation of IL-36gamma in the FRT and explores its contribution to the host response against genital HSV-2 infection.

To test the hypothesis that IL-36gamma is a key regulator of mucosal inflammation and immunity in the FRT, hormonal regulation of IL-36gamma in the FRT was investigated using estrogen- and progesterone-conditioned mice. From this preliminary study, it was shown that progesterone dampens IL36G expression relative to estrogen and may potentially increase susceptibility to infection. Next, the impact of IL-36gamma treatment on HSV-2 infection and replication in human 3-D vaginal epithelial cells was explored. In parallel, the impact of intravaginal IL-36gamma delivery on HSV-2 disease pathogenesis was evaluated using a lethal murine challenge model. IL-36gamma pre-treatment significantly limited HSV-2 replication in vitro and in vivo and was associated with transient neutrophil infiltration that corresponded with decreased disease severity and increased survival in mice. Last, the requirement for IL-36gamma in host defense was investigated utilizing IL-36gamma-/- mice in a lethal HSV-2 murine challenge model. Following infection, IL-36gamma-/- mice exhibited significantly impaired neutrophil recruitment, decreased overall survival time, and significantly increased viral neuroinvasion relative to wild type mice. Collectively, these data indicate that IL-36gamma is a crucial regulator of HSV-2-induced neutrophil infiltration and appears to function in a previously uncharacterized manner to limit viral neuroinvasion in genital HSV-2 disease pathogenesis.
ContributorsGardner, Jameson Kyle (Author) / Herbst-Kralovetz, Melissa M (Thesis advisor) / Lake, Douglas F (Committee member) / Jacobs, Bertram L (Committee member) / Boehmer, Paul E (Committee member) / Hogue, Ian B (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019