News - 2003 / 2004
Spring 2004 News
The
Biological Sciences
Division Award for Best Dissertation to Mike Spiotto
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Mike Spiotto, M.D. Ph.D. student
in Hans Schreiber's lab was awarded the Biological Sciences Division
Award for Best Dissertation, the highest distinction for students
across all the Biological Sciences Division departments and committees.
Mike combined molecular biology, genetic engineering and cellular
immunology to set up a new in vivo model system enabling him to
simultaneously track the T cell response to a tumor and the tumor cells
themselves as they mutate their antigens and escape immune rejection.
He made several far-reaching observations explaining how the
tumor-specific killer T cells cope with changes in concentration or
affinity of tumor antigen, and illuminating the critical role of stroma
in cross-presenting tumor antigens for the eradication of these tumors.
Gauge of the considerable impact in the field of his work published in
Immunity (Immunity.
2002 Dec;17(6):737-47) and Nature Medicine (Nature
Medicine 10, 294 - 298 (2004)), his tumor rejection model is now
being used in top laboratories worldwide.
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COI
thesis award shared by
Pat Burkett and Robert Chin
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Pat Burkett and Robert Chin,
students of the University of Chicago MSTP program, completed their
Ph.D. Thesis in Immunology this Spring with high marks from the COI
Steering Committee chaired by Dr. Albert Bendelac. Pat Burkett from
Averil Ma's lab elucidated unexpected contributions of the IL-15
Receptor alpha chain to the function of IL-15 in vivo (Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA 100:4724-4729, 2003). Robert Chin in Yang-Xin Fu's
laboratory uncovered a functional connection between lymphotoxin and
autoimmunity through the induction of Aire in thymic epithelial cells (Nature
Immun. 5:141-49, 2004). The COI is proud to recognize these
scientific accomplishments as well as many other generous and exemplary
contributions to the immunology community at the University of Chicago.
Each award is accompanied by a $500 check.
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pSMAC
and cSMAC in the
Gajewski laboratory
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Dr. Thomas Gajewski's laboratory
recently has published two articles on aspects of the actin
cytoskeleton, immunological synapse formation, and T cell regulation.
The immunological synapse, defined as an organization of molecules at
the interface between a T cell an an antigen-presenting cell, has been
observed to be divided into a central supramolecular activation cluster
(cSMAC) and a peripheral supramolecular activation cluster (pSMAC).
Although it had been proposed that formation of a cSMAC is required for
optimal T cell activation, graduate student James P. O'Keefe has shown
that naïve CD8+ T cells do not form a cSMAC but yet are
activated normally (PNAS reference from below). These results support
the alternative model that cSMAC/pSMAC segregation may be more
important for directional excocytosis by effector cells (Mol. Cell Biol.,
Vol. 24, 1628-1639, 2004). In a second report, graduate student
Fabiola Rivas showed that actin polymerization inhibitors augment
rather than block cytokine production from Th1 and Th2 cells (MCB
reference from below), despite complete disruption of an immunological
synapse. This effect was correlated with prolonged NFAT nuclear
localization and decreased calcium export from the cell following TCR
ligation. These results point to calcium signal termination as an
actin-dependent process, and identify calcium export channels as
potential immunoregulatory molecules (PNAS,
Vol. 101, 9351-9356, 2004).
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COI
welcomes two new faculty
members, Dean James Madara and Assistant Professor Aaron Dinner
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Jim Madara, the Dean of
Biological Sciences Division, investigates the cell biology of the
intestinal epithelial cell. His laboratory has become increasingly
interested in understanding the interaction of microbes with the
intestinal epithelial cell and its consequences for host defense.
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Dr. Aaron Dinner, Assistant
Professor in the chemistry department and member of the Institute for
Biophysical Dynamics is developing
theoretical approaches and models to understand the mechanisms of
cellular dynamics. His work on the immunological synapse was recently
published in Science (Science
302:1218-1222, 2003).
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Megan
McNerney receives Award
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Megan McNerney, an MSTP COI
graduate student in the laboratory of Dr. Vinay Kumar received the Best
Speaker Award in the Basic Science category at the 20th International
Natural Killer Cell Workshop held at Leeuwenhorst, Netherlands from
April 24th to 28th. The award was based on her presentation entitled:
"2B4 (CD244) acts as non-MHC binding inhibitory receptor on mouse NK
cells". The inhibitory functions of 2B4 represent a novel form of self
tolerance in NK cells that is not based on recognition of MHC class I
molecules. The paper bearing the same title will appear in the May 3,
2004 issue of the Journal of Experimental Medicine(J. Exp. Med.,
199:1245-1254, 2004). This paper has also has been choosen under
the "Editors Choice: highlights of recent literature" in Science Volume
304, Number 5674, Issue of 21 May 2004 ,page 1079.
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Winter 2003-2004 News
Targeting
the tumor stroma
to prevent the immunological escape of variant cancer cells
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Cancer cells express antigens
that are targets for specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and form
the basis of many new cancer vaccine approaches. However, cancer cells
are genetically unstable and subpopulations of variant cells that no
longer express the target antigens escape immune destruction and grow
progressively. In a paper published by Nature Medicine (Nature
Med. 10:294-298, 2004) Mike Spiotto, a M.D. Ph.D. student in Hans
Schreiber's lab just revealed one clever way in which this
escape can be combated. Enhancing cross-presentation of cancer antigens
by the tumor stroma (the non-cancerous part of the tumor) enabled CTLs
to killed stromal cells, starving the cancer cells and indirectly
preventing the outgrowth of antigen-loss variants. This exciting
finding suggests that combining cancer vaccines with strategies
enhancing presentation of tumor antigens by stromal cells may provide
considerable synergy in the immunological treatment of cancer.
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The
American Association of
Immunologists Excellence in Mentoring Award goes to Frank Fitch
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The American Association of
Immunologists has elected Frank Fitch, Professor Emeritus in the
Committee on Immunology, as the recipient of the 2004 Excellence in
Mentoring Award. The Award will be conferred during a special ceremony
at the annual meeting of the American Association of Immunologists in
Washington DC (April-17-21, 2004). This most prestigious award honors
outstanding contributions to the field of Immunology through the
mentoring of trainees who have become themselves outstanding
scientists. Frank, the former chairman of the COI, exemplifies the
spirit of the University of Chicago Immunology community, the special
emphasis on the mentor-trainee relationship and the belief that a
dedicated mentor can significantly influence a trainee's successful
development and career.
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A
collaborative study from
the Alegre lab reveals a novel mechanism of immune suppression by
CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells
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Marisa Alegre and colleagues, in
collaboration with Paolo Puccetti and colleagues from the University of
Perugia, Italy, have shown that CTLA-4, a receptor constitutively
expressed by CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells, engages the ligand B-7 on
dendritic cells to induce tryptophan catabolism. In turn, these
'conditioned' dendritic cells suppress lymphocytes interacting with
them through metabolic starvation. This proposed scenario suggests
exciting new therapeutic approaches, for example using pharmacological
inhibitors of tryptophan, in order to suppress unwanted immune
responses, such as graft rejection during organ transplantation (Nature
Immunol. 4:1206-12, 2003).
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A
role for cyclin D3 in
normal T cell development and in T cell malignancies is uncovered by
Iannis Aifantis and colleagues.
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Mammals have three D cyclins
(cyclins D1?D3), which were thought to be largely redundant. Using
cyclin D3-deficient mice, Iannis Aifantis, an Assistant Professor in
the COI, in collaboration with the Sicinski laboratory at Harvard
University, showed that cyclin D3 specifically controlled the
maturation of thymocytes into so-called CD4+CD8+ "double-positive" (DP)
cells, the precursors to CD4 and CD8 T cells (Cancer
Cell 4:451-61, 2003), by Sicinska and Aifantis, etc.). Furthermore,
cyclin D3 deficient mice showed reduced susceptibility to T-ALL
leukemias arising from immature T cells. Cyclin D3 may become a very
interesting therapeutic target in human malignancies derived from
immature T lymphocytes (see News and Views in the same issue of Cancer
Cell 4:417-18, 2003 by Weng and Aster).
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Guido
Franzoso's lab
elucidates the molecular basis of NF-kB induced survival during TNFa
signaling
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TNFa is an essential cytokine
regulating inflammatory and cancer processes. Using a genetic screen,
Guido Franzoso's lab recently identified Gadd45b as a pivotal mediator
of the anti-apoptotic function of NF-kB in TNF signaling, which
suppressed JNK signaling (De Smaele et al, Nature 2001, 414, 308-13).
Now, the lab has biochemically characterized the target of Gadd45b,
i.e. the intersection between NF-kB and JNK signaling, as MKK7 the
activator of JNK (Nature
Cell Biol. 6:146-53, 2004). This discovery has major applications
for the design of specific inhibitors of inflammation and cancer.
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Yang-Xin
Fu's laboratory
brings LIGHT to tumor immunology
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LIGHT is a novel member of the
Tumor necrosis factor family whose expression triggers upregulation of
chemokines and adhesion molecules by engaging the lymphotoxin b
receptor and the herpes viral entry mediator (HVEM) on stromal cells
and T cells. By forcing expression of LIGHT inside tumors of mice, Dr.
Ping Yu and colleagues, from the laboratory of Yang-Xin Fu, in
collaboration with Dr. Hans Schreiber, a tumor immunologist at the
University of Chicago, induced massive priming of anti-tumor T cells
and immune rejection of tumor in situ and at distal sites (Nature
Immun. 5:141-49, 2004). Converting the tumor microenvironment,
usually a potent barrier against immune activation, into an
inflammatory site, appears to be a crucial component of future immune
therapies against cancer.
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Collaborative
study
published in Science by the Bendelac laboratory identifies saposins as
essential lipid transfer proteins for CD1-mediated glycolipid antigen
presentation to T cells.
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CD1 molecules are distant cousin
of MHC molecules that evolved to present lipid rather than peptide
antigens to T cells. The factors assisting the exchange of glycolipids
between membrane bilayers and the antigen binding groove of CD1 have
now been identified in a study published in Science (Science
303:523-27, 2004). First author Dapeng Zhou, a Cancer Research
Institute postdoctoral fellow in the Bendelac lab, used a genetic
approach to demonstrate the requirement of a family of proteins called
saposins for glycolipid presentation to T cells. In collaboration with
the laboratory of Dr. Luc Teyton at the Scripps Research Institute the
molecular mechanism was shown to involve extraction by saposins of
lipids from membranes as well as from the groove of CD1 molecules. In a
Perspectives article (Science
303:485-87, 2004) in the same issue of Science, Dr. Gennaro de
Libero suggested that the study initiates a new chapter in the field of
antigen presentation. Albert Bendelac, the Professor and Chair of the
Committee on Immunology, and co-senior author with Luc Teyton on the
Science paper, indicated that the findings also had important medical
implications for the design of lipid vaccines against bacteria,
including the agents of tuberculosis and leprosy, and various cancers
expressing tumor-specific glycolipids that can be targeted by
CD1-specific T cells.
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Autumn 2003 News
Aire
expression and
Autoimmunity controlled by the lymphotoxin pathway
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Aire is a transcription factor
expressed by thymic epithelium, which appears to be crucial for immune
tolerance. Using lymphotoxin b receptor deficient mice, Robert Chin and
colleagues from the Yang-Xin Fu laboratory (Nature
Immun. 4:1121-27, 2003) found that Aire expression was reduced.
Conversely, activation of the lymphotoxin b receptor increased Aire
expression. The authors concluded that Aire expression is directed by
the lymphotoxin pathway in a cross-talk between thymocytes and thymic
stroma that is central to immunological tolerance.
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Great
Lakes Transplant
Immunology Forum Fourth Annual Meeting at the University of Chicago
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Anita Chong (Department of
Surgery), Amelia Bartholomew (University of Illinois at Chicago) and
Marisa Alegre (Department of Medicine) organized the 4th Great Lakes
Transplant Immunology Forum that took place November 20-21 2003 at the
University of Chicago. This conference annually brings together 15
laboratories with a common interest in transplantation, from 10
different universities in the Midwest. It provides an informal forum in
which to present unpublished observations, discuss new ideas, identify
novel research tools and models and establish exciting collaborations.
The guru this year was Herman Waldmann, the Sir William Dunn Professor
and Head of the Department of Pathology, University of Oxford, Oxford,
Great Britain.
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Tom
Gajewski promoted to
Associate Professor with Tenure

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Tom Gajewski MD, PhD, who joined
the Faculty at the University of Chicago as an Assistant Professor in
1997 with a dual appointment in the Department of Pathology and the
Department of Medicine, was promoted to the rank of Associate Professor
with tenure. Tom's laboratory studies the molecular and cellular
regulation of T lymphocyte activation and differentiation, and in turn
applies this information to preclinical and clinical efforts to promote
anti-tumor immunity in vivo. The recipient of several Clinical
Scientist Awards, including from the Cancer Research Institute and the
Burroughs Wellcome Fund, Tom is leading the Immunology Program of the
University of Chicago Cancer Center, and is actively developing and
implementing tumor vaccine strategies to cure cancer patients.
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Michael
Nishimura promoted to
Associate Professor with assignment to the Tenure track
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Michael Nishimura, Ph.D., joined
the Faculty at the University of Chicago in 2000, as an Assistant
Professor in the Department of Surgery. Mike's laboratory studies T
cell responses to cancer in humans and is developing new strategies of
gene transfer where genes encoding potent, cancer antigen-specific T
cell receptors are retrovirally expressed in the peripheral blood
lymphocytes of cancer patients in order to bolster their anti-cancer
immune defenses. Mike is currently the Director of the Surgical
Oncology Laboratories in the Department of Surgery.
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COI
annual retreat with a
"guru", Paul W Kincade, President of the American Association of
Immunologists
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Paul Kincade, the past President
of the American Association of Immunologists, was the Visiting
Professor at the Annual Retreat of the Committee on Immunology, held at
Lake Lawn Resort, Delavan, Wisconsin, October 10-12, 2003. Paul gave an
overview of his long-standing research career and accomplishments on
lymphoid progenitors, and also reported his studies on the current
state of career opportunities in biological sciences (FASEB J. 2003,
17, 2169-73). Awards for the best oral presentations went to Robert
Chin from the Yang-Xin Fu lab, for his talk "Lymphotoxin pathway
directs thymic AIRE expression", a work just published in Nature
Immunology (2003 4, 1121-1127) and Salvatore Papa from the Guido
Franzoso lab, for his talk "Gadd45b mediates the NF-kB suppression of
JNK signaling by targeting MKK7/JNKK2". Best poster awards went to Zara
Hovhannisyan, from the Bana Jabri lab Stabilization of the DQ8/gluten
peptide complex by a conserved negative charge in the CDR3
hypervariable region of the TCR, and to Megan McNerney from the Vinay
Kumar lab for "A novel role of 2B4 as an inhibitor of NK cells". A
Special Award was also awarded to Mona Mashayekhi, an undergraduate
student in the Marisa Alegre lab for "Transplant tolerance in mice with
reduced NF-kB in T cells".
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Hans
Schreiber awarded the
Alexander von Humboldt Prize
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Hans Schreiber received the
Alexander von Humboldt Prize. The prize recognizes outstanding,
career-long scientific contributions ral sciences (physics, chemistry,
biology or medicine), mathematics, or humanities. Announced on
September 24, 2003 at the annual meeting of the German Society for
Immunology, the award will be presented by the President of the Federal
Republic of Germany in Berlin in June 2004. Hans, who is a Professor in
the Department of Pathology at the University of Chicago, helped
establish the field of cancer antigens. His proved the existence of
cancer-specific antigens encoded by somatic mutations restricted to the
cancer cells. His current research, focusing on escape variants, aims
at developing novel means of targeting tumor stroma to accomplish
rejection of established cancers and their metastases.
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Martin
Weigert appointed
Director of the Gwen Knapp Center For Lupus and Immunology Research
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Martin Weigert, the Louis
Hillmann Professor of Life Sciences in the Department of Molecular
Biology at Princeton University, has joined the Faculty at the
University of Chicago as a Professor of Pathology andDirector of the
Gwen Knapp Center for Lupus and Immunology Research. Martin's group
discovered several of the basic processes underlying the generation of
antibodies by B lymphocytes, including somatic hypermutation and
editing. His studies on lupus, an autoimmune disease characterized by
an antibody response against DNA and products of dying cells, have
illuminated the mechanisms of disease and led to the generation of the
first transgenic mouse models of lupus. Martin, who was recently
elected to the National Academy of Sciences, is the founder and
organizer of the Research Workshop on the Genetics and Mechanisms of
Lupus and Autoimmunity, where top scientists gather every year to
discuss cutting edge research in the field of Lupus. During the
reception organized by Dean Jim Madara on November 4, 2003, Martin
emphasized the important role played by the Knapps in promoting
research on lupus not only at the University of Chicago, but also at
the national level. Several new faculty members will be recruited to
the Knapp center in coming years, in a renewed effort to understanding
and treating lupus and autoimmune diseases.
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Harinder
Singh awarded a
named Professorship
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Harinder Singh, Professor in
Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology and Investigator of the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute has been appointed a Louis Block Professor.
His molecular and genetic studies of transcription factors that
regulate the development and gene expression patterns of hematopoietic
stem cell cells have led to seminal discoveries. In particular,
Harinder’s group identified the central function of PU-1 for
the generation of lymphoid and myeloid lineages. His recent work
delineates functional interplays between transcription factors that
control B, T and macrophage lineages.
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Saturday
Seminars in Biology
for High School Students and Teachers
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The Saturday Seminars in Biology
program, sponsored by the Biological Sciences Division, and by a series
of grants from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, provide an
opportunity for 350 high school teachers and their students from
Chicago and suburbs to attend lectures at the Biological Sciences
Learning Center presented by faculty in the Biological Sciences
Division. The Saturday Seminars in Biology meet on the third Saturday
of each month throughout the school year. The first lecture of the day
is open to teachers and invited students, followed by a more
comprehensive lecture open only to teachers. Then, teachers have the
opportunity to network with each other and discuss high school biology
curriculum issues. Among the distinguished and inspirational teachers
this Fall were members of the Committee on Immunology Harinder Singh,
Professor in Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology and a Howard Hughes
Investigator, and Barbara Kee, Assistant Professor in Pathology.
Harinder gave the first lecture this year titled "Stem Cell Biology and
Its Applications", a topic that dominated headlines throughout the
summer. Barbara Kee lectured on the genetic processes leading to the
formation of the diverse antibody repertoire.
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Committee On Immunology
News Archive
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