Featured Publications
Broad immune activation underlies shared set point signatures for vaccine responsiveness in healthy individuals and disease activity in patients with lupus
Kotliarov Y, Sparks R, Martins A, Mulè M, Lu Y, Goswami M, Kardava L, Banchereau R, Pascual V, Biancotto A, Chen J, Schwartzberg P, Bansal N, Liu C, Cheung F, Moir S, Tsang J. Broad immune activation underlies shared set point signatures for vaccine responsiveness in healthy individuals and disease activity in patients with lupus. Nature Medicine 2020, 26: 618-629. PMID: 32094927, PMCID: PMC8392163, DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-0769-8.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdaptive ImmunityAdolescentAdultAgedAged, 80 and overAntibody FormationB-LymphocytesChildChild, PreschoolCohort StudiesFemaleGene Expression ProfilingHumansInfluenza VaccinesInfluenza, HumanLupus Erythematosus, SystemicMaleMiddle AgedTranscriptomeVaccinationYellow FeverYellow Fever VaccineYoung AdultConceptsDisease activityVaccine responsivenessAutoimmune disease activityBlood transcriptional signaturesYellow fever vaccinationSystemic lupus erythematosusClinical quiescenceFever vaccinationLupus erythematosusCancer immunotherapyBaseline predictorsDisease outcomeHealthy subjectsImmune responseI IFNHealthy individualsVaccinationTranscriptional signatureImmune variationBaseline statePatientsExtent of activationBiological basisSurface proteinsInfection responseGlobal Analyses of Human Immune Variation Reveal Baseline Predictors of Postvaccination Responses
Tsang J, Schwartzberg P, Kotliarov Y, Biancotto A, Xie Z, Germain R, Wang E, Olnes M, Narayanan M, Golding H, Moir S, Dickler H, Perl S, Cheung F, Center T, Consortium T, Obermoser G, Chaussabel D, Palucka K, Chen J, Fuchs J, Ho J, Khurana S, King L, Langweiler M, Liu H, Manischewitz J, Pos Z, Posada J, Schum P, Shi R, Valdez J, Wang W, Zhou H, Kastner D, Marincola F, McCoy J, Trinchieri G, Young N. Global Analyses of Human Immune Variation Reveal Baseline Predictors of Postvaccination Responses. Cell 2014, 157: 499-513. PMID: 24725414, PMCID: PMC4139290, DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.03.031.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPre-existing antibody titersPostvaccination antibody responsePeripheral blood mononuclear cell transcriptomeB cell responsesBaseline time pointPostvaccination responsesInfluenza vaccinationImmune monitoringSerum titersAntibody titersAntibody responseBaseline predictorsBaseline differencesImmune parametersHuman immunityCell responsesSubpopulation frequenciesTime pointsCell populationsIntra-individual variationVaccinationTiters
2019
Overexpression of T-bet in HIV infection is associated with accumulation of B cells outside germinal centers and poor affinity maturation
Austin JW, Buckner CM, Kardava L, Wang W, Zhang X, Melson VA, Swanson RG, Martins AJ, Zhou JQ, Hoehn KB, Fisk JN, Dimopoulos Y, Chassiakos A, O'Dell S, Smelkinson MG, Seamon CA, Kwan RW, Sneller MC, Pittaluga S, Doria-Rose NA, McDermott A, Li Y, Chun TW, Kleinstein SH, Tsang JS, Petrovas C, Moir S. Overexpression of T-bet in HIV infection is associated with accumulation of B cells outside germinal centers and poor affinity maturation. Science Translational Medicine 2019, 11 PMID: 31776286, PMCID: PMC7479651, DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aax0904.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAntibodies, NeutralizingAntibody AffinityAntigens, CD19B-LymphocytesCytokinesFemaleGerminal CenterHIV InfectionsHumansImmunologic MemoryLymph NodesMaleMiddle AgedMutation RatePhenotypeReceptors, Antigen, B-CellT-Box Domain ProteinsT-Lymphocytes, Helper-InducerTranscriptomeYoung AdultConceptsHIV-specific B cellsT-betGC B cellsGerminal centersB cellsLymph nodesPoor affinity maturationChronic immune activationMemory B cell compartmentAntibody-mediated immunityChronic infectious diseaseOptimal antibody responseB cell compartmentChronic human infectionsB cell receptorHIV viremiaImmunologic outcomesHIV infectionViremic individualsChronic viremiaImmune activationPeripheral bloodProtective antibodiesAntibody responseCD19
2014
Abnormal B cell memory subsets dominate HIV-specific responses in infected individuals
Kardava L, Moir S, Shah N, Wang W, Wilson R, Buckner CM, Santich BH, Kim LJ, Spurlin EE, Nelson AK, Wheatley AK, Harvey CJ, McDermott AB, Wucherpfennig KW, Chun TW, Tsang JS, Li Y, Fauci AS. Abnormal B cell memory subsets dominate HIV-specific responses in infected individuals. Journal Of Clinical Investigation 2014, 124: 3252-3262. PMID: 24892810, PMCID: PMC4071400, DOI: 10.1172/jci74351.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHIV-specific responsesMemory B cellsB cellsInfected individualsMemory subsetsUninfected individualsVirus-specific B cell responsesMemory B cell subsetsPeripheral blood B cellsCertain infected individualsHIV-specific antibodiesB cell abnormalitiesAbnormal B cellsB-cell dysfunctionB cell responsesBlood B cellsB cell subsetsStage of infectionPlasma viremiaAntiretroviral therapyHIV antibodiesHIV diseaseHIV infectionImmune activationCell subsets