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Thomas Stratmann


thomas.stratmann@ub.edu

Journal articles

2012
2011
Li Wen, Elizabeth A Green, Thomas Stratmann, Anaïs Panosa, Ramon Gomis, Elizabeth E Eynon, Richard A Flavell, Jovita A Mezquita, Conchi Mora (2011)  In vivo diabetogenic action of CD4+ T lymphocytes requires Fas expression and is independent of IL-1 and IL-18.   Eur J Immunol 41: 5. 1344-1351 May  
Abstract: CD4(+) T lymphocytes are required to induce spontaneous autoimmune diabetes in the NOD mouse. Since pancreatic β cells upregulate Fas expression upon exposure to pro-inflammatory cytokines, we studied whether the diabetogenic action of CD4(+) T lymphocytes depends on Fas expression on target cells. We assayed the diabetogenic capacity of NOD spleen CD4(+) T lymphocytes when adoptively transferred into a NOD mouse model combining: (i) Fas-deficiency, (ii) FasL-deficiency, and (iii) SCID mutation. We found that CD4(+) T lymphocytes require Fas expression in the recipients' target cells to induce diabetes. IL-1β has been described as a key cytokine involved in Fas upregulation on mouse β cells. We addressed whether CD4(+) T cells require IL-1β to induce diabetes. We also studied spontaneous diabetes onset in NOD/IL-1 converting enzyme-deficient mice, in NOD/IL-1β-deficient mice, and CD4(+) T-cell adoptively transferred diabetes into NOD/SCID IL-1β-deficient mice. Neither IL-1β nor IL-18 are required for either spontaneous or CD4(+) T-cell adoptively transferred diabetes. We conclude that CD4(+) T-cell-mediated β-cell damage in autoimmune diabetes depends on Fas expression, but not on IL-1β unveiling the existing redundancy regarding the cytokines involved in Fas upregulation on NOD β cells in vivo.
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Elisa I Rivas, John P Driver, Nahir Garabatos, Maximiliano Presa, Conchi Mora, Fernando Rodriguez, David V Serreze, Thomas Stratmann (2011)  Targeting of a T cell agonist peptide to lysosomes by DNA vaccination induces tolerance in the nonobese diabetic mouse.   J Immunol 186: 7. 4078-4087 Apr  
Abstract: CD4 T cells are crucial effectors in the pathology of type 1 diabetes (T1D). Successful therapeutic interventions for prevention and cure of T1D in humans are still elusive. Recent research efforts have focused on the manipulation of T cells by treatment with DNA. In this paper, we studied the effects of a DNA treatment strategy designed to target antigenic peptides to the lysosomal compartment on a monospecific T cell population termed 2.5mi(+) T cells that shares reactivity with the diabetogenic T cell clone BDC-2.5 in the NOD mouse. MHC class II tetramer analysis showed that repeated administrations were necessary to expand 2.5mi(+) T cells in vivo. This expansion was independent of Ag presentation by B cells. A single peptide epitope was sufficient to induce protection against T1D, which was not due to Ag-specific T cell anergy. Typical Th2 cytokines such as IL-10 or IL-4 were undetectable in 2.5mi(+) T cells, arguing against a mechanism of immune deviation. Instead, the expanded 2.5mi(+) T cell population produced IFN-γ similar to 2.5mi(+) T cells from naive mice. Protection against T1D by DNA treatment was completely lost in NOD.CD28(-/-) mice which are largely deficient of natural regulatory T cells (Treg). Although Ag-specific Foxp3(+) Treg did not expand in response to DNA treatment, diabetes onset was delayed in Treg-reconstituted and DNA-treated NOD.SCID mice. These observations provide evidence for a Treg-mediated protective mechanism that is independent of the expansion or de novo generation of Ag-specific Treg.
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2010
Tanit Guitart, Teresa Leon Bernardo, Jessica Sagalés, Thomas Stratmann, Jordi Bernués, Lluís Ribas de Pouplana (2010)  New aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase-like protein in insecta with an essential mitochondrial function.   J Biol Chem 285: 49. 38157-38166 Dec  
Abstract: Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARS) are modular enzymes that aminoacylate transfer RNAs (tRNA) for their use by the ribosome during protein synthesis. ARS are essential and universal components of the genetic code that were almost completely established before the appearance of the last common ancestor of all living species. This long evolutionary history explains the growing number of functions being discovered for ARS, and for ARS homologues, beyond their canonical role in gene translation. Here we present a previously uncharacterized paralogue of seryl-tRNA synthetase named SLIMP (seryl-tRNA synthetase-like insect mitochondrial protein). SLIMP is the result of a duplication of a mitochondrial seryl-tRNA synthetase (SRS) gene that took place in early metazoans and was fixed in Insecta. Here we show that SLIMP is localized in the mitochondria, where it carries out an essential function that is unrelated to the aminoacylation of tRNA. The knockdown of SLIMP by RNA interference (RNAi) causes a decrease in respiration capacity and an increase in mitochondrial mass in the form of aberrant mitochondria.
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2008
Nuria Marzo, Sagrario Ortega, Thomas Stratmann, Ainhoa García, Martín Ríos, América Giménez, Ramon Gomis, Conchi Mora (2008)  Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 hyperactivity promotes autoreactivity in the immune system but protects pancreatic cell mass from autoimmune destruction in the nonobese diabetic mouse model.   J Immunol 180: 2. 1189-1198 Jan  
Abstract: Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (Cdk4) plays a central role in perinatal pancreatic beta cell replication, thus becoming a potential target for therapeutics in autoimmune diabetes. Its hyperactive form, Cdk4R24C, causes beta cell hyperplasia without promoting hypoglycemia in a nonautoimmune-prone mouse strain. In this study, we explore whether beta cell hyperproliferation induced by the Cdk4R24C mutation balances the autoimmune attack against beta cells inherent to the NOD genetic background. To this end, we backcrossed the Cdk4R24C knockin mice, which have the Cdk4 gene replaced by the Cdk4R24C mutated form, onto the NOD genetic background. In this study, we show that NOD/Cdk4R24C knockin mice exhibit exacerbated diabetes and insulitis, and that this exacerbated diabetic phenotype is solely due to the hyperactivity of the NOD/Cdk4R24C immune repertoire. Thus, NOD/Cdk4R24C splenocytes confer exacerbated diabetes when adoptively transferred into NOD/SCID recipients, compared with NOD/wild-type (WT) donor splenocytes. Accordingly, NOD/Cdk4R24C splenocytes show increased basal proliferation and higher activation markers expression compared with NOD/WT splenocytes. However, to eliminate the effect of the Cdk4R24C mutation specifically in the lymphocyte compartment, we introduced this mutation into NOD/SCID mice. NOD/SCID/Cdk4R24C knockin mice develop beta cell hyperplasia spontaneously. Furthermore, NOD/SCID/Cdk4R24C knockin females that have been adoptively transferred with NOD/WT splenocytes are more resistant to autoimmunity than NOD/SCID WT female. Thus, the Cdk4R24C mutation opens two avenues in the NOD model: when expressed specifically in beta cells, it provides a new potential strategy for beta cell regeneration in autoimmune diabetes, but its expression in the immune repertoire exacerbates autoimmunity.
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Jorge Carrillo, Maria Carmen Puertas, Raquel Planas, Xavier Pastor, Aurora Alba, Thomas Stratmann, Ricardo Pujol-Borrell, Rosa Maria Ampudia, Marta Vives-Pi, Joan Verdaguer (2008)  Anti-peripherin B lymphocytes are positively selected during diabetogenesis.   Mol Immunol 45: 11. 3152-3162 Jun  
Abstract: Rearrangement analysis of immunoglobulin genes is an exceptional opportunity to look back at the B lymphocyte differentiation during ontogeny and the subsequent immune response, and thus to study the selective pressures involved in autoimmune disorders. In a recent study to characterize the antigenic specificity of B lymphocytes during T1D progression, we generated hybridomas of islet-infiltrating B lymphocytes from NOD mice and other related strains developing insulitis, but with different degrees of susceptibility to T1D. We found that a sizable proportion of hybridomas produced monoclonal antibodies reactive to peripherin, an intermediate filament protein mainly found in the peripheral nervous system. Moreover, we found that anti-peripherin antibody-producing hybridomas originated from B lymphocytes that had undergone immunoglobulin class switch recombination, a characteristic of secondary immune response. Therefore, in the present study we performed immunoglobulin VL and VH analysis of these hybridomas to ascertain whether they were derived from B lymphocytes that had undergone antigen-driven selection. The results indicated that whereas some anti-peripherin hybridomas showed signs of oligoclonality, somatic hypermutation and/or secondary rearrangements (receptor edition and receptor revision), others seemed to directly derive from the preimmune repertoire. In view of these results, we conclude that anti-peripherin B lymphocytes are positively selected and primed in the course of T1D development in NOD mice, and reinforce the idea that peripherin is a relevant autoantigen targeted during T1D development in this animal model.
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Thomas Stratmann, Paloma Más (2008)  Chromatin, photoperiod and the Arabidopsis circadian clock: a question of time.   Semin Cell Dev Biol 19: 6. 554-559 Dec  
Abstract: Plants, as many other organisms, synchronize the timing of their physiology and development by using an endogenous mechanism called circadian clock. Perception of environmental changes during the day-night cycle is crucial for circadian function, which relies on transcriptional feedback loops at the core of a central oscillator. Recent studies in Arabidopsis have shown that the transcriptional regulation of clock gene expression is governed by rhythmic changes in chromatin structure. The chromatin remodelling activities relevant for clock function are modulated by day-length or photoperiod, suggesting a mechanism by which the plant clock synchronizes development with the external time. Evidence that a central component of the mammalian clock has histone acetyltransferase activity suggests that chromatin remodelling has evolved as an important mechanism for circadian function.
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2005
Thomas Stratmann, Angray S Kang (2005)  Cognate peptide-receptor ligand mapping by directed phage display.   Proteome Sci 3: Jun  
Abstract: A rapid phage display method for the elucidation of cognate peptide specific ligand for receptors is described. The approach may be readily integrated into the interface of genomic and proteomic studies to identify biologically relevant ligands.
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2004
Ian F Robey, Melissa Peterson, Marc S Horwitz, Dwight H Kono, Thomas Stratmann, Argyrios N Theofilopoulos, Nora Sarvetnick, Luc Teyton, Ann J Feeney (2004)  Terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase deficiency decreases autoimmune disease in diabetes-prone nonobese diabetic mice and lupus-prone MRL-Fas(lpr) mice.   J Immunol 172: 7. 4624-4629 Apr  
Abstract: The wide diversity of the T and B Ag receptor repertoires becomes even more extensive postneonatally due to the activity of TdT, which adds nontemplated N nucleotides to Ig and TCR coding ends during V(D)J recombination. In addition, complementarity-determining region 3 sequences formed in the absence of TdT are more uniform due to the use of short sequence homologies between the V, D, and J genes. Thus, the action of TdT produces an adult repertoire that is both different from, and much larger than, the repertoire of the neonate. We have generated TdT-deficient nonobese diabetic (NOD) and MRL-Fas(lpr) mice, and observed a decrease in the incidence of autoimmune disease, including absence of diabetes and decreased pancreatic infiltration in NOD TdT(-/-) mice, and reduced glomerulonephritis and increased life span in MRL-Fas(lpr) TdT(-/-) mice. Using tetramer staining, TdT(-/-) and TdT(+/+) NOD mice showed similar frequencies of the diabetogenic BDC 2.5 CD4(+) T cells. We found no increase in CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells in NOD TdT(-/-) mice. Thus, TdT deficiency ameliorates the severity of disease in both lupus and diabetes, two very disparate autoimmune diseases that affect different organs, with damage conducted by different effector cell types. The neonatal repertoire appears to be deficient in autoreactive T and/or B cells with high enough affinities to induce end-stage disease. We suggest that the paucity of autoreactive specificities created in the N region-lacking repertoire, and the resultant protection afforded to the newborn, may be the reason that TdT expression is delayed in ontogeny.
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2003
Thomas Stratmann, Luc Teyton (2003)  Getting a grip on antigen-specific CD4 T cells: Tracking autoimmune T cells in vivo.   Discov Med 3: 18. 42-43 Oct  
Abstract: Extract: Autoreactive T cells are part of the normal immune system and are kept under control by mechanisms known as anergy. Autoimmune diseases are caused by the breakdown of this tolerance, and T cell activation leads to severe inflammation and tissue damage. For example, in rheumatoid arthritis, synovial joints will be destroyed whereas in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM, type 1 diabetes), insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreatic islets of Langerhans will be the focus of the attack. The genetic makeup of susceptible individuals and the environmental factors leading to autoimmunity are complex and largely unknown. In many instances, the main genetic locus that has been determined is the MHC (major histocompatibility complex) class II locus. In the case of IDDM this locus encodes alleles such as HLA-DR4, -DR3, and -DQ8 in humans and I-Ag7 in the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse. Since MHC class II molecules present peptides to CD4 positive T cells, it is tempting to link genes and function and to study closely CD4+ T cells in the context of autoimmunity. It is now well established that, indeed, these cells are essential for the initiation and development of autoimmunity, however, in-depth investigation of them has been impeded by two major roadblocks. First, potential antigens, and therefore relevant peptides, are scarce and difficult to isolate. Secondly, reagents able to detect T cells in an antigen-specific fashion have remained elusive.
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Valérie I Mallet-Designe, Thomas Stratmann, Dirk Homann, Francis Carbone, Michael B A Oldstone, Luc Teyton (2003)  Detection of low-avidity CD4+ T cells using recombinant artificial APC: following the antiovalbumin immune response.   J Immunol 170: 1. 123-131 Jan  
Abstract: Subtle differences oppose CD4+ to CD8+ T cell physiologies that lead to different arrays of effector functions. Interestingly, this dichotomy has also unexpected practical consequences such as the inefficacy of many MHC class II tetramers in detecting specific CD4+ T cells. As a mean to study the CD4+ anti-OVA response in H-2(d) and H-2(b) genetic backgrounds, we developed I-A(d)- and I-A(b)-OVA recombinant MHC monomers and tetramers. We were able to show that in this particular system, despite normal biological activity, MHC class II tetramers failed to stain specific T cells. This failure was shown to be associated with a lack of cooperation between binding sites within the tetramer as measured by surface plasmon resonance. This limited cooperativeness translated into a low "functional avidity" and very transient binding of the tetramers to T cells. To overcome this biophysical barrier, recombinant artificial APC that display MHC molecules in a lipid bilayer were developed. The plasticity and size of the MHC-bearing fluorescent liposomes allowed binding to Ag-specific T cells and the detection of low numbers of anti-OVA T cells following immunization. The same liposomes were able, at 37 degrees C, to induce the full reorganization of the T cell signaling molecules and the formation of an immunological synapse. Artificial APC will allow T cell detection and the dissection of the molecular events of T cell activation and will help us understand the fundamental differences between CD4+ and CD8+ T cells.
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Thomas Stratmann, Natalia Martin-Orozco, Valérie Mallet-Designe, Laurent Poirot, Dorian McGavern, Grigoriy Losyev, Cathleen M Dobbs, Michael B A Oldstone, Kenji Yoshida, Hitoshi Kikutani, Diane Mathis, Christophe Benoist, Kathryn Haskins, Luc Teyton (2003)  Susceptible MHC alleles, not background genes, select an autoimmune T cell reactivity.   J Clin Invest 112: 6. 902-914 Sep  
Abstract: To detect and characterize autoreactive T cells in diabetes-prone NOD mice, we have developed a multimeric MHC reagent with high affinity for the BDC-2.5 T cell receptor, which is reactive against a pancreatic autoantigen. A distinct population of T cells is detected in NOD mice that recognizes the same MHC/peptide target. These T cells are positively selected in the thymus at a surprisingly high frequency and exported to the periphery. They are activated specifically in the pancreatic LNs, demonstrating an autoimmune specificity that recapitulates that of the BDC-2.5 cell. These phenomena are also observed in mouse lines that share with NOD the H-2g7 MHC haplotype but carry diabetes-resistance background genes. Thus, a susceptible haplotype at the MHC seems to be the only element required for the selection and emergence of autoreactive T cells, without requiring other diabetogenic loci from the NOD genome.
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2000
T Stratmann, V Apostolopoulos, V Mallet-Designe, A L Corper, C A Scott, I A Wilson, A S Kang, L Teyton (2000)  The I-Ag7 MHC class II molecule linked to murine diabetes is a promiscuous peptide binder.   J Immunol 165: 6. 3214-3225 Sep  
Abstract: Susceptibility to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is linked to MHC class II genes. The only MHC class II molecule expressed by nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, I-Ag7, shares a common alpha-chain with I-Ad but has a peculiar beta-chain. As with most beta-chain alleles linked to diabetes susceptibility, I-Ag7 contains a nonaspartic residue at position beta57. We have produced large amounts of empty I-Ag7 molecules using a fly expression system to characterize its biochemical properties and peptide binding by phage-displayed peptide libraries. The identification of a specific binding peptide derived from glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) has allowed us to crystallize and obtain the three-dimensional structure of I-Ag7. Structural information was critical in evaluating the binding studies. I-Ag7, like I-Ad, appears to be very promiscuous in terms of peptide binding. Their binding motifs are degenerate and contain small and/or small hydrophobic residues at P4 and P6 of the peptide, a motif frequently found in most globular proteins. The degree of promiscuity is increased for I-Ag7 over I-Ad as a consequence of a larger P9 pocket that can specifically accommodate negatively charged residues, as well as possibly residues with bulky side chains. So, although I-Ad and I-Ag7 are structurally closely related, stable molecules and good peptide binders, they differ functionally in their ability to bind significantly different peptide repertoires that are heavily influenced by the presence or the absence of a negatively charged residue at position 57 of the beta-chain. These characteristics link I-Ag7 with autoimmune diseases, such as insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
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A L Corper, T Stratmann, V Apostolopoulos, C A Scott, K C Garcia, A S Kang, I A Wilson, L Teyton (2000)  A structural framework for deciphering the link between I-Ag7 and autoimmune diabetes.   Science 288: 5465. 505-511 Apr  
Abstract: Susceptibility to murine and human insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus correlates strongly with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II I-A or HLA-DQ alleles that lack an aspartic acid at position beta57. I-Ag7 lacks this aspartate and is the only class II allele expressed by the nonobese diabetic mouse. The crystal structure of I-Ag7 was determined at 2.6 angstrom resolution as a complex with a high-affinity peptide from the autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) 65. I-Ag7 has a substantially wider peptide-binding groove around beta57, which accounts for distinct peptide preferences compared with other MHC class II alleles. Loss of Asp(beta57) leads to an oxyanion hole in I-Ag7 that can be filled by peptide carboxyl residues or, perhaps, through interaction with the T cell receptor.
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1997
T Stratmann, S R Schmid, J F Harper, A S Kang (1997)  Bacterial expression and purification of recombinant Plasmodium yoelii circumsporozoite protein.   Protein Expr Purif 11: 1. 72-78 Oct  
Abstract: We report the expression and purification of recombinant rodent malarial Plasmodium yoelii circumsporozoite surface protein (PyCSP) in Escherichia coli. To facilitate purification of the recombinant protein, the PyCSP was expressed as an amino-terminal fusion protein to glutathione S-transferase and as a carboxy-terminal fusion protein to a hexahistidyl tag. The expression of the fusion protein was controlled by the inducible tac promoter. Under optimal conditions the immunoreactive PyCSP represented approximately 0.04% of the total cell lysate. Western blot analysis probing with an anti-PyCSP antibody revealed a wide array of immunoreactive bands. Material isolated by affinity purification on glutathione-Sepharose 4B resin also contained multiple bands indicative of premature termination or carboxyl-terminal degradation. Analysis of protein retained on a nickel nitrilotriacetic acid resin revealed evidence of amino-terminal deleted material. Combining the two mild affinity purifications resulted in isolation of a single immunoreactive protein of approximate molecular weight of 96 kDa. We anticipate that the approach described in this study will facilitate the production of highly purified recombinant proteins.
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