Arnaud D Colantonio

University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA

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Publications (7)41.56 Total impact

  • Article: Flow cytometry based identification of simian immunodeficiency virus Env-specific B lymphocytes.
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    ABSTRACT: SIV infection of macaques is the most widely employed model for preclinical AIDS vaccine and pathogenesis research. In macaques, high-titer virus-specific antibodies are induced by infection, and antibody responses can drive evolution of viral escape variants. However, neutralizing antibodies (Nabs) induced in response to SIVmac239 and SIVmac251 infection or immunization are generally undetectable or of low titer, and the identification and cloning of potent Nabs from SIVmac-infected macaques remains elusive. Based on recent advances in labeling HIV-specific B lymphocytes [1-3], we have generated recombinant, secreted, soluble SIVmac envelope (Env) proteins (gp120 and gp140) for detection and quantification of SIVmac Env-specific B lymphocytes. In contrast to HIV-1, we found that soluble SIVmac239 gp140 retains the ability to form stable oligomers without the necessity for introducing additional, stabilizing modifications. Soluble oligomeric gp140 reacted with rhesus anti-SIV Env-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), and was used to deplete Env-specific antibodies with SIV neutralization capability from plasma taken from a rhesus macaque immunized with live attenuated SIVmac239∆nef. Soluble gp120 and gp140 bound to SIV-specific immortalized B cells, and to SIV Env-specific B lymphocytes in peripheral blood of immunized animals. These reagents will be useful for analyzing development of Env-specific B cell responses in preclinical studies using SIV-infected or vaccinated rhesus macaques.
    Journal of immunological methods 06/2011; 370(1-2):75-85. · 2.35 Impact Factor
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    Article: KIR polymorphisms modulate peptide-dependent binding to an MHC class I ligand with a Bw6 motif.
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    ABSTRACT: Molecular interactions between killer immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) and their MHC class I ligands play a central role in the regulation of natural killer (NK) cell responses to viral pathogens and tumors. Here we identify Mamu-A1*00201 (Mamu-A*02), a common MHC class I molecule in the rhesus macaque with a canonical Bw6 motif, as a ligand for Mamu-KIR3DL05. Mamu-A1*00201 tetramers folded with certain SIV peptides, but not others, directly stained primary NK cells and Jurkat cells expressing multiple allotypes of Mamu-KIR3DL05. Differences in binding avidity were associated with polymorphisms in the D0 and D1 domains of Mamu-KIR3DL05, whereas differences in peptide-selectivity mapped to the D1 domain. The reciprocal exchange of the third predicted MHC class I-contact loop of the D1 domain switched the specificity of two Mamu-KIR3DL05 allotypes for different Mamu-A1*00201-peptide complexes. Consistent with the function of an inhibitory KIR, incubation of lymphocytes from Mamu-KIR3DL05(+) macaques with target cells expressing Mamu-A1*00201 suppressed the degranulation of tetramer-positive NK cells. These observations reveal a previously unappreciated role for D1 polymorphisms in determining the selectivity of KIRs for MHC class I-bound peptides, and identify the first functional KIR-MHC class I interaction in the rhesus macaque. The modulation of KIR-MHC class I interactions by viral peptides has important implications to pathogenesis, since it suggests that the immunodeficiency viruses, and potentially other types of viruses and tumors, may acquire changes in epitopes that increase the affinity of certain MHC class I ligands for inhibitory KIRs to prevent the activation of specific NK cell subsets.
    PLoS Pathogens 03/2011; 7(3):e1001316. · 9.13 Impact Factor
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    Article: IFN-α is constitutively expressed in the human thymus, but not in peripheral lymphoid organs.
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    ABSTRACT: Type I interferons have been typically studied for their effects in the context of bacterial or viral infections. However in this report, we provide evidence that Interferon-alpha (IFN-α) expressing cells are present in the thymus in the absence of infection. We show that pDC express the highest level of IFN-α and that MxA, which is exclusively expressed after engagement of the type I IFN receptor by IFN-α/β, is expressed in normal fetal and post-natal thymus, but not in the periphery. The highest level of MxA is expressed in mature thymocytes and pDC located in the medulla and at the cortico-medullary junction. The anti-microbial peptide LL-37, which is expressed in the thymus, when complexed with eukaryotic nucleic acids, induces the secretion of IFN-α by thymic pDC. This results in the upregulation of MxA expression in responsive thymocytes. We propose that the secretion of IFN-α in the thymus may function to regulate the rate of T cell development and modulate the requirements for the selection of developing T cells.
    PLoS ONE 01/2011; 6(8):e24252. · 4.09 Impact Factor
  • Article: Persistent gammaherpesvirus replication and dynamic interaction with the host in vivo.
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    ABSTRACT: Gammaherpesviruses establish life-long persistency inside the host and cause various diseases during their persistent infection. However, the systemic interaction between the virus and host in vivo has not been studied in individual hosts continuously, although such information can be crucial to control the persistent infection of the gammaherpesviruses. For the noninvasive and continuous monitoring of the interaction between gammaherpesvirus and the host, a recombinant murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV-68, a gammaherpesvirus 68) was constructed to express a firefly luciferase gene driven by the viral M3 promoter (M3FL). Real-time monitoring of M3FL infection revealed novel sites of viral replication, such as salivary glands, as well as acute replication in the nose and the lung and progression to the spleen. Continuous monitoring of M3FL infection in individual mice demonstrated the various kinetics of transition to different organs and local clearance, rather than systemically synchronized clearance. Moreover, in vivo spontaneous reactivation of M3FL from latency was detected after the initial clearance of acute infection and can be induced upon treatment with either a proteasome inhibitor Velcade or an immunosuppressant cyclosporine A. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the in vivo replication and reactivation of gammaherpesvirus are dynamically controlled by the locally defined interaction between the virus and the host immune system and that bioluminescence imaging can be successfully used for the real-time monitoring of this dynamic interaction of MHV-68 with its host in vivo.
    Journal of Virology 11/2008; 82(24):12498-509. · 5.40 Impact Factor
  • Article: The role of the thymus in HIV infection: a 10 year perspective.
    AIDS (London, England) 02/2008; 22(2):171-84. · 4.91 Impact Factor
  • Article: Stimulated plasmacytoid dendritic cells impair human T-cell development.
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    ABSTRACT: Thymic plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are located predominantly in the medulla and at the corticomedullary junction, the entry site of bone marrow-derived multipotential precursor cells into the thymus, allowing for interactions between thymic pDCs and precursor cells. We demonstrate that in vitro-generated pDCs stimulated with CpG or virus impaired the development of human autologous CD34(+)CD1a(-) thymic progenitor cells into the T-cell lineage. Rescue by addition of neutralizing type I interferon (IFN) antibodies strongly implies that endogenously produced IFN-alpha/beta is responsible for this inhibitory effect. Consistent with this notion, we show that exogenously added IFN-alpha had a similar impact on IL-7- and Notch ligand-induced development of thymic CD34(+)CD1a(-) progenitor cells into T cells, because induction of CD1a, CD4, CD8, and TCR/CD3 surface expression and rearrangements of TCRbeta V-DJ gene segments were severely impaired. In addition, IL-7-induced proliferation but not survival of the developing thymic progenitor cells was strongly inhibited by IFN-alpha. It is evident from our data that IFN-alpha inhibits the IL-7R signal transduction pathway, although this could not be attributed to interference with either IL-7R proximal (STAT5, Akt/PKB, Erk1/2) or distal (p27(kip1), pRb) events.
    Blood 01/2007; 108(12):3792-800. · 9.90 Impact Factor
  • Article: Endogenous IFN-alpha production by plasmacytoid dendritic cells exerts an antiviral effect on thymic HIV-1 infection.
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    ABSTRACT: Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) are the principal producers of IFN-alpha in response to viral infection. Because pDC are present in the thymus, we investigated the consequences of HIV-1-induced IFN-alpha production by thymic pDC. We observed that thymic pDC as well as thymocytes express intracellular IFN-alpha upon infection with HIV-1. However, only the pDC could suppress HIV-1 replication, because depletion of pDC resulted in enhancement of HIV-1 replication in thymocytes. Thymic pDC could also produce IFN-alpha in response to CpG oligonucleotides, consistent with the observations of others that peripheral pDC produce IFN-alpha upon engagement of TLR-9. Importantly, CpG considerably increased IFN-alpha production induced by HIV-1, and addition of CpG during HIV-1 infection enhanced expression of the IFN response protein MxA in thymocytes and strongly reduced HIV-replication. Our data indicate that thymic pDC modulate HIV-1 replication through secretion of IFN-alpha. The degree of inhibition depends on the level of IFN-alpha produced by the thymic pDC.
    The Journal of Immunology 01/2005; 173(12):7269-76. · 5.79 Impact Factor