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HHMI International Research Scholars
William Ross Heath, Ph.D.
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BIOGRAPHY:

Dr. Heath is Senior Research Fellow in the Immunology/Health Department of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Melbourne. He received his Ph.D. in 1988 in the field of immunology from the University of Melbourne in Australia. He did postdoctoral work in the United States in the Immunology Department of Scripps Research Institute. In 1993 he received an Australian Research Fellowship, and in 1998 was awarded the Burnet Prize from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. His HHMI-funded research concerns self tolerance and viral immunity.

RESEARCH ABSTRACT SUMMARY:

The Role of Cross-Presentation in Self Tolerance and Viral Immunity

We have previously shown that mice expressing ovalbumin (OVA) in their pancreatic islet beta cells induced the deletion of CD8+T cells specific for this autoantigen. This Bim-dependent deletion process involves cross-presentation of islet antigens by a CD8+ subset of dendritic cells, which appear to scan all tissues for self-antigens. In an attempt to understand the need for such a peripheral surveillance system, we investigated the role of dendritic cell subsets in viral immunity. This work revealed that the same subset of CD8+ dendritic cells was heavily involved in the generation of cytotoxic T cell immunity to three different viral infections: herpes simplex virus type 1, influenza virus, and vaccinia virus. Given that CD8+ dendritic cells are the major subset responsible for cross-presentation of cellular antigens, our data suggest that they form a surveillance network that captures cell-associated antigens from peripheral tissues and, in the absence of infection, induces tolerance, but during viral infection is responsible for cross-priming cytotoxic T cell immunity. Examination of the mechanism by which the CD8+ dendritic cells obtain viral antigen suggests that this lymph node–resident subset may require the participation of other dendritic cells for the trafficking of viral antigens from the site of infection to the draining node.


Photo: Kent Kallberg, Kallberg Studios

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