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Associate Professor M.D., Ph.D. Pediatric Infectious Diseases Departments of Pediatrics, Microbiology and Immunology |
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E-mail: |
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Research |
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a cancer-causing human herpesvirus that persists in B lymphocytes for the life of the host in greater than 95% of the world’s population. EBV is associated with endemic Burkitt lymphoma in equatorial Africa, nasopharyngeal cell carcinoma in South-east Asia, Hodgkin’s disease, AIDS lymphomas, and B cell lymphoproliferative diseases (LPD)/lymphomas during T cell immunocompromise worldwide. EBV is also the causative agent of infectious mononucleosis, a form of EBV-driven lymphoproliferation during primary infection that is eventually controlled by the immune system. EBV-LPD/lymphomas during immunocompromise are aggressive tumors that can affect as many as 20% of solid-organ transplant recipients. Treatment of EBV-mediated diseases is challenging and no specific therapy or vaccine directed against the virus exists. We find EBV exciting not just for the multitude of diseases it can cause, but also for the unique and long history of peaceful coexistence of humans with this virus. This evolutionary coexistence has likely shaped the human host’s anti-pathogen defenses such as the immune system, while at the same time providing the virus with the ability to establish and maintain persistence in B lymphocytes. Our goal is to better understand such EBV-host interactions, aberrations in which often lead to EBV-mediated disease, by adopting a three-pronged approach. The first focuses on dissecting the early cellular events that are critical for susceptibility of B cells to EBV-driven proliferation. The second is to reveal the determinants of susceptibility of latently-infected B cells to lytic cycle-inducing triggers. The third focuses on delineating EBV-directed immune responses during health and disease. EBV-driven B cell proliferation Susceptibility to EBV lytic cycle induction EBV-directed immune response Cell mediated immune responses to EBV are critical for prevention of outgrowth of EBV-infected B cells into EBV-lymphomas. We developed innovative tools that led us to discover the importance of CD4+ and γ-δ T cells in controlling EBV-transformed B cells. Of translational significance, our findings indicate that CD4+ T cells and γ-δ T cells are likely to be important components of reactivated T cell lines used in adoptive immunotherapy against EBV-lymphomas. |