Adaptive immunity to pathogens hinges upon separate processes for short- and long-term increases in the activity of antigen-specific B and T lymphocytes. Short-term multiplication and differentiation of plasma cells and cytotoxic T cells is critical for resolving an existing infection, but the strength of the immediate response needs to be balanced with the processes that establish long-term immunity such as affinity maturation, formation of memory B and T cells, and differentiation of long-lived bone marrow plasma cells. Much remains unknown about the genetic and systems-level decision-making that guides these short- and long-term processes. Without that understanding there are major gaps in strategies to establish and improve vaccines against many NIH Priority Pathogens, and to interpret patterns of human genetic, cellular, and serological variation to predict the efficacy and longevity of immunity in clinical settings and in the field. This project, in synergy with the Cores and other projects of this U19 program, will expand the community resource of mouse mutations and datasets that experimentally connect discrete genes with the cells and systems governing short- and long-term adaptive immunity. These resources and datasets will be distributed to the community via repositories and websites to enable researchers to test their own hypotheses about adaptive immunity. In addition, the project will focus on a subset of novel gene mutations affecting memory versus effector decisions or antibody affinity maturation in the context of immunity to NIH Priority Pathogens, and determine the cellular and molecular systems controlled by these genes.

Public Health Relevance

Immunity to viruses and bacteria, especially those representing potential bio-terrorism agents and emerging diseases, depends upon thousands of mostly unexplored genes that come together in sophisticated control systems coordinating the production of antibodies and T cells of the immune system. This project will define these genes and systems, and thereby open the way for new technologies to promote immunity against these agents

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Program--Cooperative Agreements (U19)
Project #
5U19AI100627-02
Application #
8523785
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1-QV-I)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2013-09-01
Budget End
2014-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$1,035,593
Indirect Cost
$8,326
Name
Scripps Research Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
781613492
City
La Jolla
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92037
Good, Zinaida; Sarno, Jolanda; Jager, Astraea et al. (2018) Single-cell developmental classification of B cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia at diagnosis reveals predictors of relapse. Nat Med 24:474-483
McAlpine, William; Sun, Lei; Wang, Kuan-Wen et al. (2018) Excessive endosomal TLR signaling causes inflammatory disease in mice with defective SMCR8-WDR41-C9ORF72 complex function. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E11523-E11531
Morin, Matthew D; Wang, Ying; Jones, Brian T et al. (2018) Diprovocims: A New and Exceptionally Potent Class of Toll-like Receptor Agonists. J Am Chem Soc 140:14440-14454
Johnson, Jarrod S; Lucas, Sasha Y; Amon, Lynn M et al. (2018) Reshaping of the Dendritic Cell Chromatin Landscape and Interferon Pathways during HIV Infection. Cell Host Microbe 23:366-381.e9
Goltsev, Yury; Samusik, Nikolay; Kennedy-Darling, Julia et al. (2018) Deep Profiling of Mouse Splenic Architecture with CODEX Multiplexed Imaging. Cell 174:968-981.e15
Wagle, Mayura V; Marchingo, Julia M; Howitt, Jason et al. (2018) The Ubiquitin Ligase Adaptor NDFIP1 Selectively Enforces a CD8+ T Cell Tolerance Checkpoint to High-Dose Antigen. Cell Rep 24:577-584
Wang, Tao; Bu, Chun Hui; Hildebrand, Sara et al. (2018) Probability of phenotypically detectable protein damage by ENU-induced mutations in the Mutagenetix database. Nat Commun 9:441
Anchang, Benedict; Davis, Kara L; Fienberg, Harris G et al. (2018) DRUG-NEM: Optimizing drug combinations using single-cell perturbation response to account for intratumoral heterogeneity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E4294-E4303
Burns, Tyler J; Frei, Andreas P; Gherardini, Pier F et al. (2017) High-throughput precision measurement of subcellular localization in single cells. Cytometry A 91:180-189
Burnett, Deborah L; Parish, Ian A; Masle-Farquhar, Etienne et al. (2017) Murine LRBA deficiency causes CTLA-4 deficiency in Tregs without progression to immune dysregulation. Immunol Cell Biol 95:775-788

Showing the most recent 10 out of 121 publications